Millard v. Hewlett

, for the plaintiff.

By the Court,

Nelson, Ch. J.

If the plaintiff was obliged to affirm the contract of loan in order to maintain this recovery, though made during infancy, the defence of usury must have been successful; for courts will not carry into effect illegal agreements, even in behalf of infants. But this is not the case he presents ; his privilege enables him to avoid the contract, and to stand before the court upon the footing as if none had been made in contemplation of law. The contract urged upon him was never obligatory, or operative, as it has always been in his power to admit or reject it. It was not absolutely void, because he had the option to enforce it against the defendant; but it never was binding upon himself, as the defendant could at no time have enforced it against him.

In confirmation of this view we' may refer to the doctrine that requires an express promise, after full age, to bind the infant in respect to a voidable contract to pay a debt entered into before; a full acknowledgment or promise to pay, or even actual payment of part, will not render him liable to pay the whole debt. 2 Barn. & Cress. 824. 2 Esp. 628. 1 T. R 648. 4 Wendell, 405. The reason is, that no legal liability or ground of action, capable of being enforced in a court of law, existed previously to the promise. The case of Stafford v. Roof, 9 Cowen, 626, goes upon the same principle, for there the contract of sale in respect to the infant did not protect the vendee from an action of trover.

The plaintiff having a right thus to treat as a nullity the contract set up against him, might have brought his action against the defendant for money had and received immediately, according to the case of Corpe v. Overton, 10 Bing. 252, in connection with the case of Stafford v. Roof. Upon what principle, then, can the defendant bring to his aid this

*303usurious contract in order to affect the rights of the infant ? If there is any thing settled in the law, the plaintiff has a right to repudiate it. “ From Bill and Whittington’s case, Dyer, 104, n. to Whywall v. Champion, Str. 1083, (says Tyndal, Ch. J. in Corpe v. Overton,) it has been always held that an infant cannot incur liability by carrying on trade. If he cannot trade, a contract to enter into trade is one which he may avoid when he becomes of age. Now, when he rescinds such a contract, he has a right to rescind the whole of it; and one of the terms of the "contract in question being that he should pay down £100, if we were to determine that he has a right to rescind the contract, and yet not recover the money paid in advance, the protection which the law extends to an infant might be altogether eluded by allowing the other party to retain the money so paid in advance.” The only distinction or principle between that case and this is, that here the contract avoided was illegal; a ground which, instead of weakening, seems to me, adds cogency to the argument. I put the case, however, entirely upon the ground that the illegal contract is out of the question, as it clearly is, unless we say that infants shall be bound by illegal contracts, though they are not by those which are legal, and then the objection of usury fails, and the right to recover becomes very plain. 1 Bos. & Pull. 3, 295. 9. Wendell, 179.

The evidence offered of confirmation of the contract after full age was too indecisive to warrant that conclusion.

Counting upon the note by the attorney is a matter about which the client usually knows very little, and should not be regarded as a confirmation.

New trial denied.