32 N.C. 474 | N.C. | 1849
In the argument of the case here the first exception taken by the plaintiff's counsel to the judge's charge is that it ought to have been submitted to the jury to decide whether or not the first contract was rescinded by the parties. His Honor instructed the jury there was no evidence that the original contract had been rescinded and another substituted. There can be no doubt but that the construction of a contract is a matter of law. If committed to writing, the meaning of the terms, where they are explicit, is a question for the court; but if doubtful and uncertain, they may be submitted to the jury, with proper instructions given hypothetically, as the case might be, and in doing so no error is committed, as has been declared by the Court this term. And if verbal, and the parties dispute about the terms of the agreement, it involves a question of fact as to the terms, to be decided by the jury; but if there (478) is no dispute as to the terms, and they be precise and explicit, it is for the court to declare their effect. Masseyv. Belisle,
His Honor having instructed the jury that the contract was not rescinded, proceeded to charge them as to the effect of the promise made by the defendant, if any was made, by using the words, "do or pay what is right." If by this (479) he was to be understood as making an additional promise to pay more than the price agreed on, it was not binding, "for want of a consideration." On the part of the plaintiff it is insisted that, although the first contract was not rescinded, yet the parties were at liberty to vary it. There is no doubt of this proposition; but it will be recollected that the variation of a contract is as much a matter of contract as the original agreement — it equally requires the concurrence of intention in the parties; it cannot be varied at the mere will and pleasure of either. But in what was the contract in this case varied? Not in the work to be done; that was not altered in the slightest manner; the plaintiff came under no new obligation; he was to do the same work he had previously bound himself to do. It was varied, says the plaintiff, in this, that the defendant promised to give an additional fifty dollars if he would build the mill. Let it be admitted that the defendant, under the circumstances, had, in so many words, promised the plaintiff that he would give him fifty dollars more, or one hundred and fifty dollars for building the mill: would that have been in law a valid promise? I concur in the opinion that it would not. A consideration is an essential ingredient to the legal existence of every simple contract. This consideration consists, as defined by Smith on Contracts, 87, to be "any benefit to the person making the promise, or any loss, trouble or inconvenience to or charge upon the person to whom it is made." The case states that the one hundred dollars, originally promised, had been paid by the defendant, and the controversy is for the fifty dollars under the alleged promise. What loss, trouble or inconvenience, or charge resulted to the plaintiff by his executing the work? He was bound to build the mill by his original contract, and he was to do and did nothing more. What benefit was to result to the *346 defendant by the promise to pay the additional fifty dollars? (480) None whatever; he was to get from the plaintiff precisely the same quantum of work without it as with it. The promise, therefore, if made, was purely a "nudum pactum," not binding in law, however it may be so in honor and conscience. The enforcement of contracts of the latter character, in the language of Lord Denman in Eastwood v. Kenyon, 11 Ad. and El., 438, however plausibly recommended by "the desire to effect all conscientious engagements, might be attended with mischievous consequences to society." The truth of this opinion might be illustrated by a variety of cases. One is furnished by that of Harris v. Watson, Peake, 72. There it was laid down by Lord Kenyon, that a promise made by a captain of a ship to one of his seamen, when the vessel was in extraordinary danger, to pay him an extra sum of money as an inducement to extra exertion for her safety, was a void promise, because every seaman is bound to exert himself to the utmost for the safety of the ship, and therefore the captain would get nothing from the seaman in exchange for his promise except that which the seaman was bound to do before. The principle established or recognized in the case last cited governs this; the plaintiff was bound to do the work and the defendant would get nothing from the new promise but what he was entitled to before he made it. If the words used by the defendant amounted to a promise, it is nudum pactum, as founded on no legal consideration, and his motive in using them is very obvious; it was to induce the plaintiff to do that which, by his contract, he was already bound to do. In the argument the counsel referred the Court to two cases. One was Pontifix v. Wilson, 52 E. C. L., 361, and the other Wood v. Edwards, 19 John., 205. We do not think either assists the plaintiff's case. In the first, the plaintiff had contracted to erect certain buildings for the defendant, who was to pay a stipulated price, when they (481) were delivered. When the buildings had progressed some time, the plaintiff refused to go on with the work unless the defendant would give security for the payment of the money. "The whole dispute," says Chief Justice Tindal, "as shown by the correspondence, was whether the defendant would give security, which the plaintiff insisted on, and had no right to insist on." The case in Johnson was that the parties had entered into a contract, under seal, for the purchase and delivery of a certain quantity of coal at a price agreed. After its execution a new agreement was drawn up by the plaintiff, but unexecuted by him, and sent to the defendant for his approval. The *347 defendant, by letter, expressed his willingness to alter the old agreement, and promised to execute the new one at some future time, but never did. The action was in assumpsit on the new agreement. The court decided that the first agreement was not set aside, but was in force, and that the proposition of the defendant to execute the new one was not binding on him, as well on the ground of want of consideration as of mutuality. These cases sustain the view taken by the judge below, both as to the rescinding of the original contract and the invalidity of the second, if made.
No exception is taken to his Honor's charge upon the first count in the plaintiff's declaration, nor to the second, as to the rule laid down by him as to the measure of damages.
PER CURIAM. Judgment affirmed.
Cited: Winstead v. Reid,
(482)