25 N.H. 82 | Superior Court of New Hampshire | 1852
In the case of Weeks v. Laighton, 5 N. H. Rep. 343, it was decided that when an infant rescinds his contract on the ground of his infancy, he is not entitled to recover any compensation for labor he may have performed under it. That decision is directly in point upon the only question presented by this case. This case is brought before us in the hope that we may reconsider that decision. We are not unwilling to look at the point anew, because of the manifest hardship and want of equity which a case like this exhibits. The plaintiff has performed services, of which the defendant has had the benefit, and the ordinary measure
In the abstract, this seems to be a very reasonable claim. But in the case of Weeks v. Laighton, it is held that the labor having been performed under a special agreement now avoided, the plaintiff is not to recover any thing under any implied contract. The contract, though now annulled, will still be regarded as an agreement which was binding at the time the service was performed. In other words, the contract is not entirely avoided, so that the parties would stand as if it had never been made; but it is partially avoided, having no effect after the election to avoid it is made, but retaining its entire force up to that time.
The general principle undoubtedly is, that when there is an express contract between parties, the law will not raise any implied contract; but we doubt if this has any application to the case where the law itself gives to one of the parties the right to avoid the contract by reason of an original and intrinsic defect. Though for some purposes, as for the purpose of preventing injustice, the law will take notice of such a contract, and regard it as having been in force until it is avoided; yet wherever such a view would be productive of wrong and injustice, the contract will be regarded as having an intrinsic defect from the first, and when annulled, will be considered never to have had any
The case of Weeks v. Laighton was decided upon the authority of Holman v. Blogg, 8 Taunt. 508; M’Coy v. Hoffman, 8 Cow. 84; Roof v. Strafford, 7 Cow. 184; against Moses v. Stevens, 2 Pick. 332; and the same authorities were followed in Harney v. Owen, 4 Blackf. 336.
Since that decision, the case of McCoy v. Hoffman has been reconsidered and overruled in New York in Millard v. Hewlett, 19 Wend. 301, and Medbury v. Watrous, 7 Hill. 110. The case of Holman v. Blogg has been overruled in England, in Corps v. Overton, 10 Bing. 252. The case of Moses v. Stevens has been sustained in Massachusetts in Vent v. Osgood, 19 Pick. 572; and the principle that an infant avoiding his contract for labor may recover upon a quantum meruit, has been recognized in Maine, in Judkins v. Walker, 5 Shepley 38, and in Vermont, in Thomas v. Dike, 11 Verm. 273, and Taft v. Pike, 14 Verm. 405.
The better reason and the weight of authority seem to us to be strong against the case of Weeks v. Laighton, and we are therefore not inclined to follow it.
We might remark upon the inconsistency of this case with the case of Britton v. Turner, 6 N. H. Rep. 481, in which it was held that a person of full age entering into a contract for services, and violating his agreement by abandoning that service without just cause and without pretence of right, may yet recover a just compensation for his services, so far as they have been beneficial to the other party, at the rate specified in the contract, after allowing a fair indemnity to such party for any damages sustained by him by the non-performance of the contract. The case of
Agreeably to the provisions of the agreement made by the parties, the case must be sent to the common pleas for trial.