The opinion of the court was delivered by
—A release in consideration of present embarrassment, is necessarily on an implied condition in morals,- that advantage'be not taken of it, after the embarrassment has ceased. A remission, which has in view an immediate relief from pecuniary pressure and not an ultimate gift of the money, gives no moral right to an extension of the creditor’s generosity beyond the object originally contemplated. A release for value or perhaps even pure good will, would extinguish the debt both in honour and conscience, such being the purpose of the creditor at the time; but what has been conceded to a debtor’s necessities, may be justly and honorably retracted on the principle of failure of consideration, when he no longer has necessities to be relieved. All that is wanting to that end, is a legal means which thq creditor may con-scionably use when it is put into his hands by the debtor himself. It seems to me, therefore, the decision in Willing v. Peters is founded in the plainest principles of reason and justice. On, ground less secure in point of reason, seems to rest the morality of the obligation imputed to a debtor who has been discharged by a statute of bankruptcy, as I attempted to show in the case of Field’s Estate, 2 Rawle, 351, without, however, at all questioning the authority of cases in which it has been held to be a sufficient consideration for a promise. The case here depending, as it docs, entirely on principle, is of a different stamp. The' supposed natural obligation which was made the consideration of the promise, was taken to be an original liability of the defendant’s intestate for mismanagement as an executor. .Now a trustee is answerable in equity, and consequently in conscience and morality, only for negligence, without which he is not bound to make good a loss suffered by the cestuy que trust; and how was the existence of negligence thought to be established? Only by rejudging the judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction directly on the point. The propriety of that seems questionable at the first blush. No one will pretend that an obligor who had thought proper to prom
,Tudgment reversed.
