The opinion of the court was delivered, January 3d 1871, by
— The 1st and 2d errors assigned are to the rulings of the learned judge below in excluding the offer of the defendants to prove a set-off, consisting of promissory notes of the plaintiffs, past due and originally drawn in favor of third persons, and by them endorsed to the defendants. Waiving the consideration of other objections made to the admission of this evidence, we think that it was rightly rejected because clearly precluded by' the terms of the lease sued upon. That a party may be debarred from availing himself of the Act of Assembly about defalcation by an agreement not to plead it, either express or implied, has been adjudged by this court in Henniss v. Page, 3 Whart. 275; Bank of the United States v. Macalister, 9 Barr 475; Reed v. Penrose, 12 Casey 214. So far as this question is concerned, the court in the case last cited may be stated to have been unanimous, for, although Mr. Justice Strong thought that the contract in that case did not, by implication, prevent the defendant garnishee from setting up his claims against the company as an answer to the attachment of another of their creditors laid upon the money in his hands, yet he admitted, in clear and distinct terms, the general principle as stated. “This right of defalcation,” said he, “is a legal right, secured to a defendant in all cases where he holds demands against a plaintiff, due in the same right and due at the time when the suit was commenced against him. I agree that he may, by express contract, preclude himself from pleading -a set-off. Such a contract, founded on consideration,- would bind'him.
The 3d error assigned is to the refusal of the learned judge to charge as requested in the defendants’ 2d point, that this suit had been prematurely brought, because the obligation to pay by the defendants did not accrue and become due until the expiration of the term granted by the lease. This proposition proceeds upon the idea that the payments stipulated to be made were in the nature of rent, and no time being expressly fixed were not payable until the land had been enjoyed. But it is very evident that the covenant to pay these debts was an immediate one, for they were then already due, and the very object of the stipulation was to save the property from being proceeded against and thus lost to the lessors. The covenant was the consideration for the grant of the lease and not for the enjoyment of the property. When a lease is granted with the reservation of only a pepper-corn or nominal rent or with no rent at all, the consideration may lawfully be and usually is a sum of money paid in cash. There is nothing to prevent it from being to be paid at a certain time in the future, or as here without any time, which is either that it shall be paid forthwith or in a reasonable time — it matters not which, so far as this case is concerned. It was not reserved as rent, and it is very plain that the parties did not so intend it.
The 4th, 8th, 9th, 10th and 11th assignments of error may be
The 5th assignment of error complains of the refusal of, the court to affirm the defendants’ 4th point, which was “ that the equitable plaintiffs held the lease subject to all equities between the legal plaintiffs and defendants at the time of bringing this suit.” In the abstract this proposition was certainly true, but it was entirely irrelevant to any question before the jury. No evidence had been given of any equities, unless the defendants considered their alleged set-off to be. such, and that as we have seen was no equity at all; for the defendants had precluded themselves by their own agreement from setting it up against the legal plaintiffs.
The remaining errors complained of in the 6th and 7th assignments may be considered together: namely, that the directors of the corporation, plaintiffs, had no power to make the lease sued on. It is supposed that a company chartered for the purpose of manufacturing and refining oil cannot lease its entire property
Judgment affirmed.