Minturn v. Seymour

The Chancellor.

The answer denies all the equity of this bill. It is true, the answer endeavours to strengthen the defendant’s case, by the introduction of new matter, and if the defence rested upon such new matter, and had admitted the equity set forth in the bill, then, according to the reason of the thing, and the general rule declared in Allen v. Crobroft, (Barnard. Ch. Rep. 373.) the injunction ought to have been continued to‘the hearing. But in this case the equity of the bill is denied. That equity consisted in the averment, that the instrument set forth in the bill, was sealed with the corporate seals of the two banks, in consideration of a good and sufficient release and discharge of the plaintiff, executed by all the other creditors; and that the creditors separately consented to execute such a discharge, under the proviso, that all of them would consent to do it. The answer denies this averment, and every pretext on which it rests. It denies that the banks executed the instrument in consideration óf any efficient discharge being given by the other *500creditors, or in consideration, that the discharge was a valid one, as to all the creditors who signed it. It states, that the instrument was signed by the creditors, individually, and by the two banks, among others, as they were respectively applied to, without any concert or mutual agreement, or condition, that other creditors should sign it. It was the voluntary and spontaneous act of each creditor, without any consideration. The answer thus meets and overthrows the charges in the bill, ©n which the special claim to the assistance of this Court was founded, and the case is reduced to this simple point, whether equity will enforce a mere voluntary agreement, not valid at law, , and especially in destruction of a legal claim, and recovery for a just debt) A voluntary deed-may be aided in special cases, as was mentioned in Bunn v. Winthrop, (l Johns. Ch. Rep. 329.) but it is -a clear, general rule, that a bill does not lie to enforce a mere voluntary agreement. The language of -the books, from the earliest to the latest cases, is uniform in support of the doctrine, that a voluntary defective conveyance, which -cannot operate at law, is not helped in equity, in favour of a volunteer, where there is no consideration, nor any accident -or fraud in-the case.'1' To entitle the party to the aid of this -Court, the instrument must -be supported by a valuable consideration, or, at least, by what a Court of equity considers a meritorious consideration, as payment of debts, or making -a provision -for a wife or child. (Pickering v. Keeling, 1 Rep. in Ch. 78. Thompson v. Attfield, 1 Vern. 40. Longdale v. Longdale, 1 Vern. 456. Colman v. Sarel, 3 Bro. 12. 1 Ves. Jun. 50. and see also, 1 Fonb. 339. s. 2. and 1 Maddoch’s Ch. Rep. 564.)

In the present case, the-defendant was a meritorious creditor, arising from the gratuitous loan to the plaintiff, of a negotiable note drawn by the defendant, at the plaintiff’s request, and for his use, without any consideration; and he afterwards, when the plaintiff stopped payment, voluntarily, and without consideration, subscribed his name to an instru*501ment, releasing and discharging the plaintiff from all demands. Since the time of that signature, he has been obliged to pay the note he so gave to the plaintiff. He then called upon him, at law, for reimbursement and indemnity; and the instrument the defendant signed was found to be insufficient at law, to protect the plaintiff from that suit, and the defendant has recovered of the plaintiff, by verdict and judgment, at law. ''•'I did think, upon the statement in the bill, that the valid discharge, given by the two banks, was in consideration of a like valid discharge by the other creditors, and that, therefore, it would be an act of fraud upon those banks, for the defendant to refuse to make effectual his discharge.'1' But the answer shows that this part of the bill was not well founded, and the case, as it stands upon the pleadings, has no claim to the equitable assistance of the Court I shall, consequently, dissolve the injunction.

Injunction dissolved.