71 Conn. 181 | Conn. | 1898
This appeal raises two questions. 1. Is a promise made by an adult to pay the sum agreed to be paid for use of premises occupied by him under a lease, while an infant over fourteen years of age, invalid, because he did not know, at the time of the promise, the law which determines the liability of minors ? 2. Upon the facts found, was the promise made under duress ?
We have never had occasion to discuss the first question, and it is of such a nature as to call for a somewhat careful examination of the policy which underlies this branch of the law of infancy. Every person from birth until the completion of his twenty-first year is in law an infant; but his actual capacity to contract is different at different portions of this period, and the law in respect to his contracts is based upon this fact. An infant under seven years of age is actually incapable of contracting, as fully so as an idiot or lunatic; the law recognizes this fact and pronounces his personal contracts absolutely void; he can contract only through a guardian, and such contracts should be beneficial to the infant. From seven to fourteen his actual discretion varies, and the law applicable to his contracts, certainly with us, is still unsettled ; probably he would be treated as wholly incapable of contracting. From fourteen, i. e. the age of puberty, he has discretion, is capable of contracting as truly, though not usually as wisely, as at any period of his life; and the law in recognition of this fact permits him to contract. He can assume the obligations of the most important contract in life, that of marriage, and may dispose of his personal property by will. (By statute a testator must be eighteen years old.)
There is, however, a distinction between a minor’s natural capacity to contract, i. e. the mental ability and discretion requisite to an intelligent assent, and his capacity to make such a contract as will bind his person and property. The one rests on a law of nature; the other is limited by municipal law. The latter capacity is inconsistent with the rights of parents ; his services belong to them. It may be inconsistent with the completion of his education and preparation for the duties of citizenship. A minor under paternal government is generally, by reason of this subjection, as well as by immaturity of age, less fit to manage his property discreetly ; the law ought, therefore, to furnish him some protection. Moreover, through his own carelessness, induced in part by his condition of subjection and the liability of others to take advantage of his weakness, there is danger that his property may be wasted, and the State has, independent of any duty of protection to the minor, a direct interest in preventing such waste. Expedit Reipublicae ne sua
For all these reasons the contracts of minors over fourteen years of age, so far as the question of capacity is involved, are an exception to the general law of contract, and are subject to a rule of public policy, founded in reason, but in some respects necessarily arbitrary. In pursuance of that policy the minor may, with certain exceptions, avoid his contracts during his minority, and upon coming of age has, with certain exceptions, the option to avoid or confirm such contracts. This option results from the removal of an incapacity, not to contract, but to bind himself by contract. As Pothier says, infants who have passed the age of puberty are rather incapable of binding themselves by their contracts, than absolutely incapable of contracting. Traité des Obligations, Part 1, Chap. 1, § 1, Art. 4. A similar thought is intended when Chief Justice Hosmeb, in Kline v. Beebe, 6 Conn. 494, 503, speaks of the law suffering “ the contract to hang in equilibrio.”
The contract of a minor, including the power, on coming of age, without any new consideration, to make the contract binding on him, is a transaction sui generis, and is not strictly analogous to any other known to the law. The nature and validity of the contract depend on the acts of a minor who has the capacity to assent, but not the capacity to bind himself during minority; the right to enforce the contract depends on the acts of an adult who has no special incapacities nor privileges. When he exercises his option, which results from his contract made while a minor, to bind or not to bind himself by the contract to which he has assented, he stands as every one else stands in the performance of a voluntary act; he is presumed to know the law. So in the present case, the defendant knew he had, while a minor, agreed, for a fair consideration which he had received and enjoyed, to pay the amount in question to the plaintiff, and voluntarily, in specific terms, promised to pay that sum. This promise bound him to make the payment by force of the same law that exempted him from liability until the promise was made, i „
There are dicta to be found in some text-books, and in opinions of the court in cases decided elsewhere, and some cases hold, that the promise of the adult to bind himself by a contract made in infancy must not only be voluntary and explicit, but must be made with knowledge that he is not legally liable unless the promise is made. The claim of the necessity of such knowledge, first appears in a dictum in Harmer v. Killing, 5 Esp. 102, a nisi prius case tried after the date of our independence. The error has been exposed and its effect traced, by the Massachusetts court in Morse v. Wheeler, 4 Allen, 570. But the erroneous dictum afterwards crept into a brief and hasty opinion of the same court in Owen v. Long, 112 Mass. 403, 404. It is difficult to account for this error. Possibly it arose from treating the promise not as a mere adjunct of an infant’s contract, authorized by the public policy which controls such contracts, but as an independent act and strictly analogous either to a waiver, or a ratification, or a new contract. Such a promise is frequently indicated by all these names ; they have been indifferently usedin several of our decisions as terms of convenience and partial illustration, but it certainly cannot be accurately described by either. In a sense such a promise operates as a waiver; but the contract of an infant cannot be relieved from the original want of capacity to bind, through the operation of the law of waiver; the voluntary specific confirmation of the adult is required to perfect the contract of the infant. Nor is it, except by figure of speech, a ratification. The infant is not an unauthorized agent of the adult, and the contract is not strictly analogous to one tainted by fraud. Perhaps the promise comes more closely to being a new undertaking, but it clearly is not one. The action must be brought on the original contract; the promise affects only the liability, and has no effect unless there is an existing contract; when that is established through the acts of the infant, the liability must be proved and is limited by the promise of the adult.
The promise was not made under duress. In asking the defendant for payment, and in threatening to commence a civil action if payment were not made, the plaintiff acted legally. Such threats cannot be held to invalidate an act otherwise voluntary. 1 Swift’s Dig. 811; Barrett v. French, 1 Conn. 354, 356. If the defendant intended to rely on duress, he should have alleged it. McVane v. Williams, 50 Conn. 548.
The court overruled the plaintiff’s claim, that the minor was bound to pay the rent because he had actually improved the premises under the lease. We do not consider this ruling. It is not assigned as error, and its decision either way could not affect the disposal of this case upon its merits.
The record contains the facts on which the judgment below is founded. Those facts do not support the judgment rendered ; they do support and require judgment for the plaintiff.
There is error, the judgment of the Court of Common Pleas is reversed, and the cause is remanded for further proceedings according to law.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.