16 Minn. 96 | Minn. | 1870
By the Court
To support this action for money had and received, the plaintiff must show that the defendant has received or obtained possession of money, which, in equity and good conscience, he ought to pay over to the plaintiff. 2 Greenl. Ev. sec. 117.
He insists that it is settled, that, where one makes a promise to another for the benefit of a third person, that third person, though 'a stranger to the consideration, may maintain an action upon such promise, and that the facts found by the referee bring this case within the rule.
Taking it for granted that it is, as Prof. Parsons says it is, (Parsons on Cont. b. 2, chap. 1, sec. 15,) safe to consider it to be a prevailing rule in this country, that a third party has a right of action on a promise made to another for his benefit, it nevertheless does not seem to us to be applicable to the case at bar ; for, upon the facts found by the referee, the promise, whatever it was, upon which defendant received the money, is not, we think, in law, to be considered as made for the benefit of the creditors of the Minnesota Central University, but for the benefit of that corporation. The money was voluntarily contributed. If, as the plaintiff says it was, it was placed in defendant’s hands for the purpose of paying
The referee finds that the plaintiff held an account against the Minnesota Central University, a corporation, of $800 and interest, which he had expressed his willingness to cancel for $400, in such payments and at such time as the friends of the university might choose; that the defendant had voted to raise $3,300 in three annual installments of $1,100 each, whereof $400 was to be paid in satisfaction of said account.
This resolution, of course, was wholly gratuitous, and binding on no one. The defendant then appointed a committee “to finish up the whole matter”; whatever powers this might have given the committee, it is found that they “notified the plaintiff of the acceptance of his proposition to receive $400 in full for his claim, and that the defendant would pay the same in three annual installments, to which plaintiff assented.”
But the plaintiff was not thereby bound to accept said sum in satisfaction of his demand. There was no consideration for his agreement to do so. A creditor cannot bind himself by a simple agreement to accept a smaller sum in lieu of an ascertained' debt to a larger amount, such agreement being nudum pactum. 1 Smith's Lead. Cas. 444. And whatever the extent of the undertaking upon which defendant received the money may be held to be, it certainly was not to pay the plaintiff his claim in full, or to pay him any sum on account, but therewith to compromise the same.
Such a promise cannot, on the facts found, be said, as a matter of law, to be for plaintiff’s benefit. Plaintiff states in his brief that the university was insolvent, but the referee does not so find, and we cannot assume that it was.
So far we have assumed that the facts found by the referee show that the defendant received of such donors the sum of $133.33 in each of the years ending Oct 1, 1861-65 and ’66, upon its promise to apply the same in effecting such compromise. It is obvious that, in such case, the money would not be received by defendant as its own, but neither would it be received as plaintiff’s money, but as the money of the donors, in trust to appropriate it' in a particular way for the university. The donors might have recovered it back if the compromise should he found impracticable, or they might, so far certainly as plaintiff is concerned, have at any time revoked their directions and thereupon have recovered it back. 2 Greenleaf Ev. sec. 119.
It follows that plaintiff could not maintain this action, the defendant having no money of his in its hands. But further, the action will not lie in any event unless the defendant received the specific sum for plaintiff’s use. Chitty on Contracts, p. 526.
We think the facts do not bear out the conclusion that any specific sum was so received. The referee finds, that during the first of the three years named the defendant received $1311.11; during the second, $1123.15; during the third, $1287.10; and that these were tbe total receipts for 'said years over which defendant had control. That after the proceedings mentioned as had by defendant at the meeting on Oct. 28, 1863, “the defendant proceeded to collect money from various Baptist churches and of individuals, for the general purposes of said convention, among which was the payment * * * of the sum of $100 to the plaintiff, and that
The object and business of the defendant, according to its charter, is found to be the promotion of the religious and educational interests of the Baptist denomination in the State of Minnesota. The referee does not specify what all the general purposes of defendant, for which it collected this money, were, but that one purpose must have been to pay its current expenses, incurred in the prosecution of the object and business for which it was chartered, would seem not to admit of any controversy.
It further appears that the current expenses of each year were paid out of the receipts of the preceding year. So far as-the receipts were used to pay those expenses, they were used for one of the purposes for which they were collected; and we are unable to discover any evidence tending to restrict the defendant in the exercise of its discretion as to which purpose it should apply the money, except the $5 aforesaid.
The plaintiff says that the resolution adopted by the convention, was the only authority it had for paying money upon any of the three objects for which it did pay it, and that that resolution bound defendant to pay plaintiff’s claims also. The resolution, as we have seen, was wholly gratuitous on defendant’s'part, and bound it to nothing so far as the plaintiff was concerned. -
But it is said that the donors knew that the defendant had adopted the resolution, and, by contributing the money with
Granting that the facts found by the referee are sufficient to show that the donors had actual notice of the passage of the resolution, the result claimed would not follow, for it appears that the money was not collected under it. The resolution required the convention to raise $3,300 in three annual installments of $1,100 each, to pay for the university building, and cancel $1,500 of the indebtedness standing against it, and to apportion the first of the above-named installments among the associations, together with the expenses of the current year. It does not appear that the first requisite towards impressing a specific character upon the donations, viz: the apportionment aforesaid, was ever made.
But it does appear that the defendant proceeded to collect, of various churches and individuals generally, money for its general purposes. It had a purpose to apply part of the money to cancel plaintiff’s debt, but that bound it to nothing so far as plaintiff was concerned. Its general purposes must be taken to have been all within the scope of its charter. It is, then, as if it had said to each donor: “I want your money to use in the promotion of the religious and educational interests of the Baptist denomination, and my purpose is to promote it among other things by using $400 of it in cancellation of plaintiff’s claim, but this is a wholly gratuitous intention on my part.” We think money delivered on such a statement, is, so far as plaintiff is concerned, received by defendánt with the same liberty ' of changing such intention, as it had before it was given to it.
Judgment reversed.