71 Ala. 429 | Ala. | 1882
This suit is one for damages, based upon the alleged breach of an agreement made between the defendant corporation, the Trustees of Howard College, and the appellee, who was plaintiff in the lower court. The instrument, which is the basis of the action, is set out in extenso in the complaint. It is entitled a “Certificate of Permanent Scholarship,” bearing date January the 23d, 1863, and purports to be executed by corporate authority, in the name of the treasurer of the institution, who is shown to have possessed authority to issue such certificates, under the by-laws of the board of trustees establishing the plan of endowment. The recital of the instrument is, that the plaintiff, Matthew Turner, “in consideration of five hundred dollars, by him paid to said college,” according to the “ terms of the plan of endowment, is entitled to a permanent scholarship, as therein, in such cases, provided.” This plan, as embodied in the certificate, provides that any person, “paying five hundred dollars into the treasury of Howard College, shall be entitled to a permanent sehola/rship in this college, that is, to the tidtion of one pupil m peiípetuo.” Such certificate is .made “transferable, as other property, at the pleasure of the holder.” It is shown, further, that the plaintiff had subscribed to the endowment fund of the college, in December, 1859, executing his five promissory notes, each payable to the Trustees of Howard College, in the sum of one' hundred dollars.
These notes were taken up and discharged, three of the five, by the payment of the full amount due on them, in Confederate money, upon the 23d of January, 1863, when the certificate of scholarship was dated and delivered.
It is contended, in the first place, that the defendant corporation had no authority to receive payment of the notes in Confederate money or currency. Being an eleemosynary institution, it is insisted that the trustees andmanagers held the endowment fund and other corporate property in trust for the various subscribers; and that the receipt of such an illegal currency was a breach of trust, and did not operate to discharge the debt due by plaintiff, nor entitle him to the ownership of the certificate of scholarship.
It is true' that the five promissory notes in question were payable, on their face, in the lawful currency of the Hnited States. They were executed before the inauguration of the war between the States, and prior to the existence of the currency known as Confederate money ; and their payment could have been exacted in lawful dollars, such as constituted a legal tender for the payment of debts.-Confederate Note Case, 19 Wall. 548;
There is nothing, then, in the argument, that the obligations-given by the plaintiff, as a subscription to the endowment fund of the college, were permitted to be discharged in Confederate States treasury notes. The case is to be considered as if the-question of Confederate money was entirely eliminated from the transaction.
We can not entertain the slightest doubt that the agreement imported by the certificate in question is a contact, for the breach of which an action of assumpsit for damages will lie. A contract, in legal contemplation, as said by Mr. Parsons, is- “ an agreement between two or more parties, for the doing or not doing of some particular thing.” — 1 Parsons on Contr. (6th Ed.) 6. Of course such an agreement must be based on sufficient consideration; and this is made a part of the definition by many elementary writers. — 2 Black. Com. 446. It is defined by Mr. Wharton to be “ an interchange by agreement of legal rights,” involving the assent of two or more persons. — 1 Whar. on Contr. § 1. Every element of these, and similar definitions enters into the agreement under consideration in the present case. The plaintiff promised to pay defendant the sum of five hundred dollars, as the consideration which was to move from him; and this obligation he has, in the eye of the law, fully-discharged. The promise of the defendant, though implied,, rather than express, is entirely unambiguous. The plaintiff is-declared to be “ entitled to a permanent scholarship in the college,” which is defined to be “the tuition of one pupil i/n per-petuo-,” — that is, the right to send any fit person within his option to the college, as a pupil, to be educated, subject to the-usual regulations of the institution, free of tuition. It would be doing violence to the rules of both language and law to say that the plaintiff was “ entitled to ” to this right, which he had' thus purchased, and yet, that the defendant was at liberty to-deny and obstruct its exercise, to utter abrogation, without le
The certificate of scholarship must be construed, according-to every sound and just rule of legal construction, to impose on the appellants in their corporate capacity, a legal duty, the-breach of which is a ground of action. It may be regarded, we think, as an incontrovertible proposition, everywhere recognized, that every violation of a legal right, in contemplation of law, causes a legal injury. “If the infraction is established,, the conclusion 'of damage inevitably follows. This deduction is made,” as observed by a recent author, “ though it actually appears, and is recognized in the'case, that there was in fact no-injury, and even a benefit conferred.” — 1 Sutherland on Dam. 2. “ Wherever,” says Mr. Sedgwick in his treatise on Damages, “ the breach of an agreement, or the invasion of a right is-established, the English law infers some damage to the plaintiff.”-1 Sedgw. on Dam. (7th Ed.), 71 [47.] Every injury,” said Lord Holt, in Ashby v. White, 1 Salk. 19, “imports a damage.”
The only point of difficulty presented to our mind in the case is the proper measure of damages. The least damages that can be allowed for a clear breach of legal dmty are nominal damages —a principle too well settled for discussion.-Adams v. Robinson, 65 Ala. 586; Sedgw. on Dam. (7th Ed.), 71 [47.] The-rule, as generally expressed, is familar, that the damages to be recovered must always be the natural and proximate consequence-of the act complained of.-2 Greenl. Ev. § 256. This excludes the idea of such damages as are merely consequential, remote or speculative, and limits the plaintiff’s recovery, in actions ex-eoniraetM, to a just compensation for the actual loss which he has sustained by the defendant’s failure to comply with his ob
The question recurs, what actual damages has the plaintiff suffered in legal contemplation ? The breach complained of is, that the defendant refused to permit the plaintiff to enjoy the benefit of the permanent scholarship which he had purchased, by denying to him the right to appoint a pupil to attend the institution, free of tuition, i/n perpetuo. The gravamen of the averment is the refusal of the defendant to recognize the binding obligation of the contract for the sale of the “scholarship.” This refusal the plaintiff was authorized to treat as a total breach, foi’ which full and final damages could be recovered. A just analogy in principle is found in that class of contracts in which an obligor agrees to provide for and support an obligee during the latter’s natural life. A refusal to comply, at any given time, has been uniformly construed into an attempt on defendant’s part to abrogate the whole agreement, which is a total breach.-Schell v. Plumb, 55 N. Y. 592; Fales v. Hemenway, 64 Me. 373; 1 Sedg. on Dam. (7th Ed.) 480 [226]; Colvin v. Corwin, 15 Wend. (N. Y.) 557.
It is no objection that, in cases of this nature, the plaintiff could not in person have reaped the benefit of the purchased privilege either himself or for the enjoyment of his immediate family. Contracts in the interest of education and of charity, being highly beneficial to the State, should be greatly favored by the law. The power to appoint a benefit to another is a valuable right, the legal value of which can not be different from the power to designate one’s self as the beneficiary of the right. If one, for example, deposit a sum of money with a banking institution, under the agreement that the interest shall be paid to such charitable uses as the depositor or his executors shall designate, the right, we ajaprehend, would be none the less valuable, because others, and not the owner of the fund, were to be the beneficiaries of his bounty. The same would be true if one should pay an agreed sum to the trustees of a hospital for lunatics, for the privilege of designating a pauper insane person, as a patient to be boarded and cared for by the managers of such institution from time to time. A refusal of the obligors in these cases to comply with their agreement would clearly be a breach of duty towards the obligees, from whom the consideration moved, and not towards the object of the charity. The fact that these cases constitute trusts, for the enforcement of which a court of equity will, in certain contingencies, take cognizance, does not prohibit the trustees from being sued at law for damages, for the non-performance of en-fagements which they have expressly assumed. — 2 Perry on 'rusts, § 842.
The measure of damages suffered by the plaintiff in the pres
It would, perhaps, better comport with the ends of justice, if we could arrive at the conclusion that the amount of damages could be gauged, to some extent, by the value of the consideration actually paid, the greater portion of which was, as above stated, Confederate money or treasury notes. But we know of no sound principle on which this can be done. The contract of the parties, having been made in the year 1859, had in view lawful money of the Dnited States. The contract price then, which was in the mind of the contracting parties, was the law
There are some analogies strongly favoring the measure of damages adopted by the Circuit Court, which seems to have been the annual value of tuition from the date of the the breach to the day of the trial. The objections to it, however, are its fluctuating uncertainty, increasing in .amount with the protraction of the litigation, and its speculative nature in assuming that the plaintiff would always be punctually ready to claim the benefit of his scholarship, with every and each succeeding year. The charge of the court, in this particular, was more favorable to the appellant than the law, in our view, authorized.
"We discover no error in the rulings of the court, which could have been prejudicial to appellant, and the judgment must be affirmed.