This action was brought to recover damages for the breach of a contract whereby the plaintiff agreed to sell and the defendant to buy a Corliss engine. The case was heard at a former term (
The defendant in its answer admitted that its president had signed a contract and pleaded specially that at the time of signing it, he was so drunk that he did not have sufficient mental capacity to contract with the plaintiff for the engine. The court, without objection, siibinitted only one issue to the jury, which is as follows: “What damage, if any, is the plaintiff entitled to recover of the defendant?” The jury answered “nothing.” Judgment was entered accordingly.
The question presented for our consideration arises upon an exception to the charge of the court regarding the drunkenness of the plaintiff’s agent and its sufficiency to avoid the contract. It is held by some authorities to be a principle of the common law that every contract, which a man
non compos mentis
makes, is avoidable, and yet shall not be avoided by himself because it is a maxim in law that no man of full age shall ]ie, in any plea to be pleaded hy himself, received by the law to stultify himself and to set up his oftvn disability in avoidance of his acts.
Beverly's
Case, 4 Rep., 123. And Coke, as appears in his Institutes, was of the same opinion: “As for a drunkard who is
voluniarius daemon,
he hath (as hath been said) no privilege thereby, but what hurt or ill soever he doth, his drunkenness doth aggravate it.” Co. Litt., 247a. But Blackstone observes that this doctrine sprung from loose authorities and he evidently agrees with Eitzherbert, who rejects the maxim as being contrary to reason. 2 Blk., 291. Whatever was the true principle of the common law as anciently understood, there can be no doubt that since the reign of Edward III, if not since the time of Edward I, it has been settled according to the dictates of good sense, and common justice that a contract made by a person, so destitute of reason as not to know the' nature and
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consequences of bis contract though his incompetence be produced by intoxication, is void, and even though his condition was caused by his voluntary act and not procured through the circumvention of the other party. Mere imbecility of mind is not sufficient as a ground for avoiding the contract when there is not an essential privation of the reasoning faculties or an incapacity of understanding. 2 Kent 451. This court has adopted Coke’s definition that a person has sufficient mental capacity to make a contract if he knows what he is about.
Moffit v. Witherspoon,
The authorities sustaining the view of the law we have stated and adopted are quite numerous. Clark on Contracts (2 Ed.), p. 186; Parsons on Cont. (9 Ed.), p. 444;
Matthews v. Baxter,
L. R. Exch., 132;
Webster v. Woodford,
It was held in
King v. Bryant,
We have examined the charge of the court with care and cannot find that His Honor said anything not in strict accordance with the law, as we now declare it to be. He charged the jury as follows: “The mere fact that the defendant’s president was drinking was not sufficient, but the jury must find that he was so intoxicated that he could not understand the nature and scope of what he was doing. If the jury find from the greater weight of the testimony that the agent was drinking, it would not be sufficient to invalidate the contract, but if the jury find that the defendant’s president, at the time he signed the contract or order for the engine, was so drunk as to be incapable of knowing the effect of what he was doing, then the contract or order would not be binding upon the defendant. Whether or not he was so intoxicated as to render him incompetent to contract, is a question for the jury upon all the evidence.” We think this was a clear and sufficient exposition of the law applicable to the facts of the case. What the judge said in his reference to the nature of the transaction in which the agent was engaged and its importance or magnitude, was not calculated in our opinion to confuse the jury or lead them away from the real question involved in the issue, but was evidently intended to point what he had already said as to the true test of mental capacity, and to impress upon them, as an essential condition of the validity of the contract, that the agent of the defendant at the time he signed the paper must have been sober enough to understand the nature of the transaction and the effect or consequence of his act, and not that he must have been able to act with wisdom or discretion. The particular transaction, and what the party did in respect to it, may have furnished some •evidence of his mental condition. The effect of that part of *370 the charge to which the plaintiff excepted was to leave the whole transaction, with the evidence as to the agent’s intoxication, to the jury, and in doing so no reversible error was committed. His Honor told the jury that they must find that the agent was so intoxicated that he did not understand the nature and scope of the transaction, and that this was a question for the jury upon all of the evidence, a part of which necessarily was the transaction itself, whether in its nature large or small. ' Even if the illustration, as argued, was not a very apt one, it did no harm that we can discover.
No Error.
