7 Johns. 87 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1810
This is a motion in arrest of judgment. The fourth count states, that the defendant, “ in consideration that the plaintiff had there, before that time, sold and conveyed unto the before-named defendants a certain farm or lot of land, situate in the town of Adams, in the said county of Jefferson, the defendant then and there undertook,” &c. This is a promise grounded on a past consideration, and all the cases agree that it must be laid to have been done upon request of the party promising, or at least it must appear that the party promising was under a moral obligation to do the act himself, or procure it to be done. (See the cases well collected in 1 Saund. 264. note 1. and 1 Fonb. 336. and they are referred to in 1 Caines, 585.) It does not seem requisite in every case of a past consideration, to lay an express request in the declaration, though the cases in which it is not required are rather exceptions to the general rule. They are such in which a beneficial consideration and a request are necessarily implied from the moral obligation under which the party was placed. (T. Raym. 260. 3 Burr. 1672. 1 Caines, 586. Str. 933. 2 Leon. 111. 1 Fonb. 336,) If we
This objection equally applies to both counts, and the judgment must consequently be arrested.
Judgment arrested.