Dolcher v. Fry

By the Gourt,

Emott, J.

This complaint is upon an agreement by paroi for the payment of money, and upon demurrer it must appear that there was some consideration for such an" agreement. Otherwise it is void, and the action must *155fail. The plaintiffs had executed a mortgage upon certain lands in Kings county, the mortgage had been foreclosed, a judgment of sale obtained, and the property sold to one Dezendorf. The plaintiffs, it is alleged in the complaint, were about to make an application to set aside the sale, on the ground of irregularity, vtken the defendant proposed to . purchase the property of Dezendorf, and to pay to the plaintiffs $500 if they would not make the application to set aside the sale or interfere in the matter. The complaint goes on to state that this proposition of the defendant was accepted by the plaintiffs, and that the defendant purchased the premises of Dezendorf, and pursuant to his agreement with the plaintiffs paid them $295 towards -the amount stipulated, leaving $205 still unpaid,-for which this suit is brought.

These are all the allegations made, and all the facts stated upon the subject of the agreement upon which this suit is founded. It is a serious if not a fatal difficulty that it does not. appear that the plaintiffs did abstain from making the application referred to, or did, or omitted to-do, any thing on their part, in pursuance of the agreement. If the agreement by which the defendant bound himself to pay money is to be sustained as a compromise of a disputed claim, it should at least appear that there was a compromise. The consideration stated here was executory, and it should at least appear that it had been performed, in order to the defendant’s liability or his corresponding obligation.

But if it had been averred that in consequence of the defendant’s promise the plaintiffs did refrain from making an application to set aside the sale, this complaint would still be defective. It is undoubtedly true that a settlement or compromise of a disputed claim or controversy is a sufficient consideration for a promise to pay money, and that the courts will not inquire whether the claim was a valid one or could have been sustained. The rule is so stated by Judge Bronson in Stewart v. Ahrenfeldt, (4 Denio, 189,) although its application was defeated there by a fraudulent concealment *156of material facts. ' So in Russell v. Cook, (3 Hill, 504,) where the action was upon a note given upon a compromise of a demand for damages done to a cargo of barley. Both these were cases where there had been a trial, and the facts appeared in evidence. In Seaman v. Seaman, (12 Wend. 381,) a similar question arose Upon a demurrer to the declaration. There the plaintiff was an heir at law of the father of the defendants, and they promised to pay him $500 in consideration of his withdrawing his opposition to the proof of his father’s will, against which he had filed a caveat. ' The declaration stated that the plaintiff did withdraw his opposition, and the will was thereupon 'proved, and in that respect the' pleading was not liable to the objection which I have already suggested to the present complaint. The demurrer was sustained, however, on the ground that it did not appear by the declaration that the plaintiff was particularly interested in having the will set aside. That objection was very nice and critical, and I confess I should have" had some hesitation -in saying that such an interest was not to be inferred from the allegation that he was an heir at law. The decision is not in point upon the material question in the present case, however, because it does not appear how far the court, considered that the declaration was sufficient in respect to an allegation that there was a controversy as to the validity of. the will. The case was decided upon the other point, and decided against the declaration. The pleading there contained much more in this respect than this complaint. It averred that the plaintiff had become dissatisfied in regard to the provisions of the will, and especially in regard to doubts entertained by him of the sanity of the testator. Whether these allegations would be enough, without stating that such doubts or some occasion for them really existed, or that there Was in point of fact a controversy as to the proof of the will, is a question upon which I confess to some difficulty, and upon which the decision of the case furnishes no guide to us.

*157• Upon principle it is clear that there must be a dispute between the parties, which was doubtful, in order to sustain a promise to pay money in a compromise.' This is the lan-, guage of the court, and the evident understanding of the law by the judges, in the case of Bussell v. Oooh, already cited. It is enough, they say, that the dispute was doubtful, (p. 506.) But it would not have been enough if the defendant had threatened a suit upon a claim which was wholly baseless, as if he had been a perfect stranger, or, as in this case, if the plaintiff had threatened to apply to set aside a judgment against which there,was no ground of complaint, for any cause whatever. The court will not look behind a compromise, or inquire where the right is, but they must see that 'there was a dispute and some doubt, an injury done, and a question as to the liability to answer for it, or the like. ‘ Otherwise it is merely extortion, and not a compromise. The case of Longridge v. Dorville (5 B. & A. 117) is generally cited as having gone to the'extretire length, in such cases, in the English courts. There the" defendant’s vessel had injured the vessel of the plaintiff by á collision, and proceedings in admiralty had been commenced, which were withdrawn upon the defendant’s stipulating to pay, by way of compromise, the sum for which the action was brought. The defendant’s vessel had a trinity hotise pilot on board, and it was therefore exceedingly doubtful,"‘upon the law, if they were liable. But there ha,d been an injury, and there was a dispute and doubt as to the responsibility for it, and the court said the parties agreed to waive, all questions of law and of fact. The case of Longridge v. Dorville was commented upon in Wade v. Simeon, (2 C. B. R. 548,) where, upon a declaration on a promise to pay moneys in consideration of forbearing to proceed with an action, a plea that the plaintiff never had any cause of action and well knew it, was held good. The cases are distinguished on the ground that m Longridge Dorville there was an uncqptainty, while in the case before the court it appeared on the pleadings that there was no- un*158certainty whatever. To the same effect is Smith v. Monteith, (13 M. &. W. 427,) and so are the earlier authorities which 'will he found cited in• these cases. Lord Coke says, as was observed by Mr. Justice Gresswell in Wade v. Simeon, that the staying of an action which has been unjustly brought is no consideration for a promise to pay money. This is as well settled and as universally true as the rule that a promise to pay money upon a compromise of a doubtful claim is valid, and the merits of the original dispute cannot be inquired into. Both rules must he applied to the cases which arise.

The case of Edwards v. Baregh (11 M. & W. 641) was in some respects like the present. There was a demurrer to a declaration, and although the declaration stated that disputes and controversies were pending between the parties as to whether the defendant owed the plaintiff a certain sum, and in consideration that the plaintiff would promise not to sue, and would accept £500 in satisfaction, the defendant promised to pay £500, yet the declaration showed no consideration for the promise because it did not allege that any debt was due, hut only that disputes existed. The opinions of the judges, and the decision of that case, go farther than is necessary here, for there is no allegation in this complaint that there was any doubt or dispute whatever as to the validity or the regularity of the judgment of foreclosure, or any ground for setting it aside. There is a case in Pennsylvania, (O’Keson v. Barclay, 2 Penn. Rep. 531,) in which a note given to settle a slander suit for words not actionable was sustained. . But the cases of Hanaker v. Eberle, (2 Bin. 509,) Johnes v. Potter, (5 S. & R. 519,) in the same state, are more in accordance with the rule to be collected from the English and the earlier authorities, and seem to me better considered. A similar principle will be found in Rowell v. Brown, (3- John. 100, 104,) where a promise to pay a debt of one W. B. to the plaintiff, in qonsideration that the plaintiff would account to the defendant for the shares of W. B. *159in the profits of a certain vessel and voyage in which they had been jointly concerned, was held void for want of consideration, unless it appeared that there were, such profits.

[Dutchess General Term, May 12, 1862.

It has been sometimes suggested that avoiding the expenses of resisting a claim or defending a suit, under any circumstances, would be a sufficient consideration for a compromise of the demand. But this would lead to sustaining such promises to pay money for the relinquishment of prosecutions which were utterly unfounded and malicious; and besides, the law supposes that the costs which would be recovered of the party making such a claim would be'a sufficient indemnity for such expenses.

This complaint is defective in not alleging that there was some doubt or dispute as to the regularity or validity of the judgment in the foreclosure action, upon which the defendant might have founded a proceeding to vacate it, and for this reason, without passing upon any other questions which have been alluded to, the demurrer should have been allowed.

The order appealed from must be reversed with costs, and judgment ordered for the defendant, with leave to the plaintiffs to amend on the usual terms.

Mnott, Brown, Scrugham and Lott, Justices.]