Corey v. Burton

32 Mich. 30 | Mich. | 1875

Cooley, J:

The circuit court put this case to the jury under instructions, in substance, that an infant who borrows money for a *31business enterprise, and gires a cbattcl 'mortgage to secure tbe payment thereof with interest, cannot disaffirm this contract without restoring the consideration received therefor, which, in this case, would be the money borrowed. The judge appears to hare regarded the mortgage as an executed contract, which was only to be disaffirmed on placing the parties in statu quo.

This view was erroneous. The mortgage, so far as the right to enforce it. by taking .possession and making sale was concerned, was only an executory contract, which the mortgagor promised to perform by the payment of the sum borrowed. Whether it was. actually void or only roidable is immaterial in this case, as this suit was brought before the infant reached her majority, and no question of affirmance can be made. If the circuit judge was correct in his instructions, the privilege of infancy is absolutely without avail in every case of a voidable contract whore the infant is not in position to restore such consideration as ho may have received for it.‘ If he borrows money , and improvidently disposes 'of it, -as the law from his want of discretion presumes ho may do, this very indiscretion which the law endeavors to shield and protect, -becomes the means of fastening the imperfect obligation irrevocably upon him, and his inability to refund what ho has borrowed affirms his contract to repay it with interest. It is needless to say that there is no privilege and no protection in any such rule.

There is no reason why one who by moans of a voidable contract made in his infancy has obtained possession of property which he retains on coming of age, should be allowed to disaffirm the contract and at the same time retain the benefit derived from it. In such a case, if he retains the property, he is justly held to affirm the contract.—Lawson v. Lovejoy, 8 Me., 405; Boyden v. Boyden, 9 Met., 519; Cresinger v. Welch, 15 Ohio, 156; Boody v. McKenney, 23 Me., 517; Robbins v. Eaton, 10 N. H., 561; Aldrich v. Grimes, Ib., 194; Armfield v. Tate,. 7 Ired., 258; *32Decison v. Boyd, 1 Dana, 45; Delano v. Blake, 11 Wend., 85; Cheshire v. Barrett, 4 McCord, 241. But this is on the ground that his conduct after he has reached the age of discretion has -precluded his relying upon an infant’s privilege; what he may have done previously can bind him neither by way of contract nor of estoppel. Nor can the mere fact that property purchased by him remains undisposed of at the time of his coining of age make the previous promise to pay for it binding upon him, unless he has in some unequivocal manner dealt with it as his property after that time.—Smith v. Kelley, 13 Met., 309. See Minock v. Shortridge, 21 Mich., 304, where this general subject is considered, and the principles above laid down affirmed.

In this case the lender of the money sought to enforce his mortgage by seizing the property while the mortgagor was still under age. The mortgagor replevied it, and the court held in effect that the mortgagee in the replevin suit was entitled to judgment for the amount which the mortgage assumed to secure. Thus the contract which confessedly was at least voidable has boon enforced against this infant, though she neither had affirmed it, nor as yet reached the age when affirmance by her ivas practicable. This was erroneous, and the judgment must bo reversed with costs, and a new trial ordered.

We have said nothing in this case concerning disputed questions of fact, as the manner in which the case was put to the' jury renders all such questions on this record immaterial.

The other Justices concurred.