Thomson v. Thomson

76 A.D. 178
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 76 A.D. 178 (Thomson v. Thomson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thomson v. Thomson, 76 A.D. 178 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

Kellogg, J.:

The record shows that defendant was indebted to Campbell, Sprague & Co. in the sum of thirty-six dollars and seventy cents for materials purchased. The plaintiffs being under no obligation to Campbell, Sprague & Co. on account of this claim, nevertheless paid it without any previous request on the part of defendant. After the plaintiffs had paid the claim, they applied to defendant and he promised to pay them the sum so by them expended for his benefit. The circumstances are such that no implied request to pay the claim can be found other than such as can be based upon the subsequent express promise of defendant to repay the plaintiffs. On this express promise the action is brought, and the action is defended on the ground that the express promise is not supported by a sufficient consideration to make it enforcible at law. The question here presented was much discussed in the earlier cases, and the cases disclose a great difference of opinion in the minds of eminent jurists. Among the earliest is the case of Wennall v. Adney (3 B. & P. 249, 252, note) which announced the proper rule to be that an express promise “ can only revive a precedent good consideration which might have been enforced at law through the medium of an implied promise, had it not been suspended by some positive rule of law; but can give no original right of action, if the obligation on which it is founded never could have been enforced at law though not barred by any legal maxim or statute provision.” Under this rule express promises of infants after age, and that of bankrupts after discharge, of married women after coverture has ceased, have been held to be good when the original debt was of their own , contracting.

[180]*180Subsequently the court in the case of Lee v. Muggeridge (5 Taunt. 37) went farther, and the rule was laid down by Mansfield, Oh. J., and his associates in broad terms: It has been long established that where a person is bound morally and conscientiously to pay a debt though not legally bound, a subsequent promise to pay will give a right of action.” This rule seems to have prevailed in the English courts until the case of Eastwood v. Kenyon (11 Ad. & El. 438) in which Lord Denman, Ch. J., criticises the rule laid down in Lee v. Muggeridge and declares in substance that a beneficial service or pecuniary benefit conferred without request and adopted by a benéficiary is not such a consideration as will support an action on the subsequent express promise of- the beneficiary to reimburse. So far as I have been able to discover this rule of law as laid down by Lord Denman has since prevailed in the English courts.

• In Mills v. Wyman (3 Pick. 209) Parker, Ch. J., says: “It is said a moral obligation is a sufficient consideration to support an express promise, and some authorities lay down the rule thus broadly; but. upon examination of the cases, we are. satisfied that the universality of the rule cannot be supported, and that there must have been some pre-existing obligation which has become inoperative by positive law to form a basis for an effective promise. The cases of debts barred by the Statute of Limitations, of debts incurred by infants, of debts of bankrupts, are generally put for illustration of the rule. Express promises founded on such preexisting equitable obligations may be enforced.” This is the rule as laid down in the Supreme Court of Massachusetts in 1825, and I do not find' that it has since been departed from in the courts of that State.

Among the first cases in the courts of this State, where the question was necessarily decided, is Hicks v. Burhems (10 Johns. 243). The court in that case says : The written promise to pay, if founded on a past consideration, may be good if the past service be laid to have been done on request; and if not. so laid, a request may be implied from the beneficial nature of the consideration and the circumstances of the transaction. * * * Here the past service consisted in an expensive pursuit by the plaintiffs of certain fugitive debtors who were indebted to the defendant and others.” In this [181]*181case the court held that a request to do the service might be implied, though the service had been already rendered.

The next case is that of Doty v. Wilson (14 Johns. 378). The plaintiff as sheriff held the defendant on a body execution, and allowed him to go at large. Judgment was had against the sheriff for the amount the defendant was held for, and, after payment, the defendant promised to reimburse the sheriff. This promise was held to be supported by a sufficient consideration. The court, by Thompson, Ch. J., says: “ We may here refer to the cases as well collected in 1 Saund, 264, n. 1.

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Related

Hathaway v. County of Delaware
103 A.D. 179 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1905)

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Bluebook (online)
76 A.D. 178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomson-v-thomson-nyappdiv-1902.