33 Ala. 53 | Ala. | 1858
—Upon the two propositions, that the agreement alleged in the bill was altogether voluntary, and that such agreement will not be executed, the chancellor based the conclusion, that the bill was wanting in equity, and dismissed it. We proceed to give the reasons, which induce us to adopt those two propositions, and to concur with the chancellor in his conclusion.
In ascertaining whether the delivery of the slaves to Lewis, to be kept by him for the complainant, was a valuable consideration for the agreement above specified, it is necessary to inquire what rights or benefits such a bailment conferred upon the bailee.
The bailment of the slaves to Lewis, to be kept without compensation for the complainant, is very like a deposit, if not identical with it. A deposition is defined to be, “ a bare naked bailment of goods, delivered by one man to another to keep for the.use of the bailor;” and it is an essential characteristic of the contract, that the keeping shall be gratuitous.—Coggs v. Barnard, 2 Lord Raymond, 909; S. C., 1 Smith’s L. C. §2; Edwards on Bail. § 47; Story on Bail. § 41. The depositary is a gratuitous bailee, and he is bound to account for any profits which may be derived from the property bailed.—Edwards on Bailments, 89-70; Story on Bailments, § 99. As the contract of Lewis was to keep the slaves for the complainant, and no benefit or profit to him was provided, and the terms of the agreement were strictly analogous to the implied agreement of a depositary, we conclude that Lewis, by .his contract, took no benefit, and could derive no profit. There was, therefore, no consideration of benefit to Lewis to support the promise which the bill seeks to enforce. The argument that Lewis was entitled to all the benefit and profit resulting from the possession of the slaves is neither supported by the terms of the agreement, nor by the law.
No consideration of detriment sustained by the complainant is either averred in the bill, or deducible from its allegations.
As the law does not imply that the promise of Lewis to give his grand-daughter a child’s part of the estate was based upon the trust and confidence of the bailment, we must look to the terms of the contract, and to the allegations of the bill, to see whether that .promise was induced by such consideration. Upon doing so, we find that it is neither stated in the contract, nor alleged in the bill, that that promise was induced by such consideration. Nor can- the inference, that the promise was based upon that consideration, be drawn from the circumstances alleged in the bill. The complainant was the only child of a deceased daughter of Lewis. Her slaves (she being an infant) were in her father’s possession. The grandfather made an agreement, conferring no benefit upon him, by which he obtained possession of the slaves, and came under the obligation to keejt them for his granddaughter. He accompanied the proposition to take charge of the slaves with the assertion, that he would make the complainant an equal participant with his children in his estate. In the proposition he did not say, that the obtainment of the custody of the slaves induced him to make that declaration. Can we infer from these circumstances, if it were permissible to resort to inference in favor of the equity of the bill, that the consideration which induced
The promise was, in our judgment, not the result of a valuable consideration. The cases of Forward v. Armstead, 12 Ala. 124, and Kirksey v. Kirksey, 8 Ala. 131, presented questions very like that which we have been considering; and in both the promise was held to have been gratuitous, although their facts afforded more ground for a different conclusion than do the facts of this case. To the former of those two cases we refer, for a correct statement of the principle governing the question here decided.
2. The promise of Lewis being voluntary and unexecuted, a court of chancery will not compel a performance of it. It is now well established, that the performance of an executory contract will not be enforced in favor of a mere volunteer, although the child of the promisor. Evans v. Battle, 19 Ala. 398; Pinckard v. Pinckard, 23 Ala. 649; 2 Story’s Equity, 125, § 793; 2 Kent’s Com. 466, note a.
The. decree of the court below is affirmed.