14 N.C. 352 | N.C. | 1832
For the defendant it was objected that the plaintiff had mistaken the form of action; that covenant upon the lease should have been brought instead of the present action. The presiding judge overruling the objection, a verdict was returned for the plaintiff, and the defendant appealed.
I should very gladly decide this small cause for the plaintiff (who is a pauper) if I could do so without removing the landmarks of the law. We must take it that the sum due him upon the settlement was for work mentioned in the lease to be done on the plantation, namely, getting rails at a particular price. If so, he still had a remedy on the covenant in the lease, which was executed by both parties. Can he have the inferior one ofassumpsit for the same thing? If one owe money on a bond and engage by parol to pay it on such a day, he cannot be sued in assumpsit. This is not a mere technical rule. All the securities which deeds are intended to create, as to the terms of the contract, in favor of the covenantor, depend on it. If indeed there be *288
no remedy on the deed; if the contract has been rescinded or abandoned before breach; if after breach it has been delivered up or satisfaction entered upon a settlement, then it is different, because there is then but one remedy and that on the promise. If one covenant to build a house for another by a particular day and fail, but builds it afterwards and it is accepted, the deed does not bar an action on the quantum meruit, though it may restrict the prices to those specified in it. So if any other executory agreement be rescinded before breach, and in consideration of that, the parties account, assumpsit lies for the balance struck. Why? Because there is no remedy on the deed. That was precisely the (354) case of Foster v. Allanson, 2 T. R., 479, and is the footing on which Buller, J., rests his decision, and this was after the case ofMoravia v. Levy before him at Nisi Prius. A partnership was then formed by deed for seven years, and there was a covenant to account annually, and to account and pay at the end of the term. Before the seven years were out they agreed to dissolve, and then to account and pay. They did account, and the action was brought for the sum acknowledged to be due. On the deed no action could by its terms be then brought, and Buller said the question was, whether the dissolving a previous partnership and settling the account was or was not, in point of law, a sufficient consideration for an express assumpsit, which he clearly held in the affirmative. But no instance can be stated in which, after the time limited in a deed for the performance of a duty thereby created, an action can be maintained on a promise to fulfill the covenant, the deed remaining all the while in existence and full force. The reason is, because precisely the same evidence, as to the extent of the demand, and indeed every other matter but the making of the agreements and the terms of them, will support both actions. And whether the law ought, for the certainly of the contract, to take the specialty or the verbal agreement, it is easy for any to judge. Here, for example, the lease fixes the price of the rails. It might be different if that were left uncertain, for fixing the price is in itself a new agreement distinct from any provision in the deed, but in the present case the only further requisite to a full recovery on the deed is evidence of the quantity, and that is susceptible of proof in an action on the covenant by the acknowledgment of the defendant as it is in assumpsit. There is then no new consideration for the promise, and the deed remained in force, for it was to be delivered to the plaintiff by the holder, not as far as appears to be canceled, but as properly belonging to the only person who then had an interest in it and could take advantage under it. In such a case I think no action lies on the promise merged in the existing deed more (355) than on a promise merged in a deed or judgment subsequently taken for the same debt. The case of Codman v. Jenkins, *289
PER CURIAM. Judgment reversed.
Cited: Burnes v. Allen,