7 Cow. 39 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1827
The evidence offered by the plaintiff was essentially different from anything that *appeared upon the former trial; and I think ought to have been received. In that case, (5 Cowen, 295,) there, was nothing to support the promise of the defendant, but his admission that his title to the lot had failed. There was no evidence that, in consequence of that promise and admission, the plaintiff had surrendered the possession of the lot; or had been damnified in any other way. For aught that appeared, he might, at the time of the trial, have been in the peaceable and undisturbed enjoyment of the land conveyed; and the opinion of the court, so far as it related to the consideration of the promise, is put expressly on that ground. We there say, “the defendant may have been mistaken in the opinion that his title had failed; the ejectment suit may have been discontinued; and the plaintiff may have retained the quiet and undisturbed possession of the premises to the present hour. We do not think a jury would be authorized in finding the fact of eviction upon this testimony. If there was no eviction, the promise of the defendant was without consideration.” We did not mean to be understood as saying, that nothing but an actual technical eviction would support a promise to refund the consideration money. There being no evidence whatever that the possession of the premises had been given up, upon the faith of the defendant’s promise to repay the price with interest, and an ejectment having been commenced, we were left to infer that he had been turned out of possession by recovery and execution. We held that the evidence would not authorize such a conclusion; and that, consequently, there appeared to be no consideration for the defendant’s promise. But, in the present case, the plaintiff
The defendant’s covenant was to pay upon eviction. His promise, upon which this action is brought, was to pay upon a voluntary surrender of the possession, without eviction. It is, therefore, a new contract, upon a new, and, as I have already shown, a sufficient consideration; and will sustain an action of assumpsit. (1 East, 630, per Lord Kenyon and Ashurst, Js. 3 T. R. 592, note. (b) 1 Chit. Pl. 96.)
As the case appeared before us- on the former occasion,it was merely a promise to perform the original covenant *without any new consideration. The evidence offered by the plaintiff, oh the last- trial, was prima facie sufficiént to entitle Mm to recover.- He was,- therefore, improperly non-suited ; and a new trial must- be granted.
Motion granted.
A consideration which has for its -object the prevention of litigation and the settlement of disputes between the parties, is sufficient to support a promise. Chitty on Con. 43. See Williams v. Alexander, 4 Iredell's Eq. Rep. 207; Zane v. Zane, 6 Munf. 406; Taylor v. Patriole, 1 Bibb. 168; Fisher v. May, 2 id. 448 ; Trust v. Chaplin, 4 Hawks, 278; Hodges v. Saunders, 17 Pick. 471; Stephens v. Bateman, 1 Bro. C. C. 22, 26; Brown v.
See New York Dig. by Hogan, tit. Assumpsit.