163 Mass. 433 | Mass. | 1895
The plaintiff had given his accommodation note to a corporation, which had had it discounted at a bank, and left it unpaid at its maturity. The defendant, being a stockholder, director, and creditor of the corporation, wishing to have the note paid at once for his own advantage, entered into an agreement with the plaintiff whereby he was to give to the plaintiff his own note for the amount, and the plaintiff was to furnish money to enable the defendant to take up the note at the bank. This agreement was carried out, and the defendant now contends that his note to the plaintiff was without consideration, because the plaintiff was already bound in law to take up the note at the bank.
It is possible that, for one reason or another, both the bank and the plaintiff may have been willing to wait a while, but that the defendant’s interests were imperilled by a delay, and indeed required that the note should be paid at once, and that the corporation, whose duty it was primarily to pay it, was without present means to do so. Since the defendant was sane, sui juris, was not imposed upon nor under duress, knew what he was about, and probably acted for his own advantage, it would certainly be unfortunate if the rules of law required us to hold his note invalid for want of a sufficient consideration, when he has had all the benefit that he expected to get from it.
In this Commonwealth it was long- ago decided that, even between the original parties to a building contract, if after having done a part of the work the builder refused to proceed, but afterwards, on being promised more pay by the owner, went, on and finished the building, he might recover the whole sum so promised. Munroe v. Perkins, 9 Pick. 298. See also Holmes v. Doane, 9 Cush. 135; Peck v. Requa, 13 Gray, 407; Rogers v
But when one who is unwilling or hesitating to go on and perform a contract which proves a hard one for him, is requested to do so by a third person who is interested in such performance, though having no legal way of compelling it, or of recovering damages for a breach, and who accordingly makes an independent promise to pay a sum of money for such performance, the reasons for holding him bound to such payment are stronger than where an additional sum is promised by the party to the original contract.
Take an illustration. A. enters into a contract with B. to do something. It may be to pay money, to render service, or to sell land or goods for a price. The contract may be not especially for the benefit of B., but rather for the benefit of others; as, e. g., to erect a monument, an archway, a memorial of some kind, or to paint a picture to be placed where it can be seen by the public. The consideration moving from B. may be executed or executory; it may be money, or anything else in law deemed valuable; it may be of slight value as compared with what A. has contracted to do. How A. is legally bound only to B., and if he breaks his contract nobody but B. can recover damages, and those damages may be slight. They may even be already liquidated at a small sum by the terms of the contract itself. Though A. is legally bound, the motive to perform the contract may be slight. If after A. has refused to go on with his undertaking, or while he is hesitating whether to perform it or submit to such damages as B. may be entitled to recover, other persons interested in having the contract performed intervene, and enter into a new agreement with A., by which A. agrees to do that which he was already bound by his contract with B. to do, and they agree jointly or severally to pay him a certain sum of money, and give their note or notes therefor, and A. accordingly
This has been so held in England, and the view is supported by English text-writers, though not always for precisely the same reasons. Scotson v. Pegg, 6 H. & N. 295. Shadwell v. Shadwell, 30 L. J. (N. S.) C. P. 145. Pollock, Con. (6th ed.) 175-177. Anson, Con. (4th ed.) 87, 88. Leake, Con. (3d ed.) 540. In this country the courts of several States have taken the opposite view, though in some instances the cases referred to as so holding, when examined, do not necessarily lead to that result. These cases are collected in the defendant’s brief,
Without dwelling further on the reasons for the doctrine, it seems to us better to hold, as a general rule, that if A. has refused or hesitated to perform an agreement with B., and is requested to do so by C., who will derive a benefit from such performance, and who promises to pay him a certain sum therefor, and A. thereupon undertakes to do it, the performance by A. of his agreement in consequence of such request and promise by C. is a good consideration to support C.’s promise.
Exceptions overruled.
The American cases cited by the defendant are Richardson v. Williams, 49 Maine, 558; Putnam v. Woodbury, 68 Maine, 58; Ellison v. Jackson Water Co. 12 Cal. 542; Ritenour v. Mathews, 42 Ind. 7; Gordon v. Gordon, 56 N. H. 170; Havana Press Drill Co. v. Ashurst, 148 Ill. 115; In re Goddard’s estate, 29 Atl. Rep. 634; Baker v. Wahrmund, 5 Tex. Civil App. 268; Ford v. Garner, 15 Ind. 298; Reynolds v. Nugent, 25 Ind. 328; Brownlee v. Lowe, 117 Ind. 420; Newton v. Chicago, Rock Island, & Pacific Railway, 66 Iowa, 422; Vanderbilt v. Schreyer, 91 N. Y. 392; Seybolt v. New York, Lake Erie, & Western Railroad, 95 N. Y. 562; Robinson v. Jewett, 116 N. Y. 40; Sherwin v. Brigham, 39 Ohio St. 137; Wimer v. Worth Township, 104 Penn. St. 317; Johnson v. Sellers, 33 Ala. 265; Schuler v. Myton, 48 Kans. 282; L’Amoreux v. Gould, 3 Seld. 349; Merrick v. Giddings, 1 Mackey, 394; Davenport v. First Congregational Society, 33 Wis. 387.