Stone v. Dennison

Shaw C. J.

delivered the opinion of the Court. Several points were left to the jury in the present case, which may be considered as settled by their verdict.

By the report it appears, that after the plaintiff1 arrived at the age of fourteen years, having then lived several years with the defendant, it was agreed between the plaintiff1 and his guardian on the one side, and the defendant on the other, at the plaintiff1 should continue in the service of the defendant *4until he should arrive at the age of twenty-one, for his board,' clothing and education. By the finding of the jury, under the instructions given to them by the Court, it must be taken to have been settled, that the contract was not obtained by any unfair means, or fraudulent, on the part of the defendant, and that it was not unequal, so as to show that the plaintiff' was overreached.

The case then is one of a minor over fourteen years of age, entering into an agreement with a person, for labor and service to be furnished on one side, and subsistence, clothing and education on the other, an agreement in which the minor tvas not overreached, which was not so unreasonable as to raise any suspicion of fraud, and which was assented to and sanctioned by the guardian of the minor. This agreement is fully executed on both sides; the labor and services are performed by the minor, and the stipulated compensation is furnished by his employer. And the question is, whether the plaintiff, notwithstanding such agreement, can maintain a quantum meruit for his services, merely by showing, that in the event which has happened, his services were worth more than the amount of the stipulated compensation ; and we think he cannot.

The first point taken by the plaintiff is, that the evidence of the agreemérit ought not to have been admitted, because the agreement, not being t'o be performed within a year, and not being in writing, was void by the statute of frauds. St. 1788, c. 16, § 1.

But we think this objection is answered by the consideration, that here the contract has been completely performed on both sides. The defendant is not seeking to enforce this agreement as an executory contract, but simply to show that the plaintiff is not entitled to recover upon a quantum meruit, as upon an implied promise. But the statute does not make such a contract void. The provision is, that no action shall be brought, whereby to charge any person upon any agreement, which is not to be performed within the space of one year, unless the agreement shall be in writing. The statute prescribes the species of evidence necessary to enforce the execution of such a contract. But where the contract has *5been in foot performed, the rights, duties and obligations of the parties resulting from such performance, stand unaffected by the statute.

In the ease of Beydell v. Drummond, 11 East, 142, a case was put in the argument, of goods sold and delivered at a certain price, by parol, upon a credit of thirteen months. There, as a part of the contract was the payment of tire price, which was not to be performed within the year, a question is made, whether by force of the statute the purchaser is exempted from the obligation of the agreement, as to the stipulated price, so as to leave -it open to the jury to give the value of the goods only, as upon an implied contract. “ In that case,” said Lord Elhnborough, “ the delivery of the goods, which is supposed to fee made within the year, would (be a complete execution of tlae contract on the one part; and the question of consideration only would be reserved to a future- period.”

If a performance upon one side would avoid the operation of the statute, a fortiori would the entire and complete performance on both sides, have that effect. Take the common case of a laborer, entering into a contract with his employer, towards the close of a year, for another year’s service, upon certain stipulated terms. Should either party refuse to perform, the statute would prevent either party from bringing any action, whereby to charge the other, upon such contract. But it would be a very different question, were the contract fulfilled upon both sides, by the performance of the services on the one part, and the payment of money om account, from time to time, on the other, equal to the amount of the stipulated wages. In case of the rise of wages within the year, and the consequent increased value of the services, could the laborer bring a quantum meruit and recover more, or in case of the fail of labor and the diminished value of the services, could the employer bring money had and received and recover back part of the money advanced, on the ground, that by the statute of frauds the original contract could not have been enforced ? Such, we think, is not the true construction of the statute. We are of opinion that it ha" no *6application to executed contracts, and that the evidence of this contract was rightly admitted.

We do not think it necessary, in the present case, to consider some of the points made in the argument, as to the cases in which the judge of probate has the power, under the statute, to appoint guardians to minors, and as to the authority of such guardians over the persons, property and rights of their wards, because we are all clearly of opinion, that the contract in question was one which the minor, with the consent of the guardian, was himself competent to make.

It is a well settled rule of law, that a minor, under the age of twenty-one years, cannot bind himself generally by his contracts, for want of legal capacity. But as an exception to this general rule, it is equally well settled, that a minor may bind himself by a contract for necessaries, if equa. and reasonable, and also that he may make contracts which are beneficial to him. We think the present case brings the contract under the first of these exceptions.

A contract for subsistence, clothing and education, is a contract for necessaries, and is one therefore which the minor has capacity to make, and which, if reasonable and beneficial, will be supported by the law. Most of the cases, xvhere it has been decided that a minor cannot be held on his express contract for necessaries, are those xvhere the action is founded on the express obligation, and where, from the form of the action, the consideration cannot be inquired into. As an action on a bond xvith a penalty, which implies a consideration, and where an inquiry into the consideration is precluded by the forms of pleading and proof. So on an insimul comput assent, where the action is founded upon the act of accounting and the admission of the balance, and no further inquiry into the consideration and terms of the contract can be gone into. These actions are founded on the assumption, that the party has full poxver to hind himself by any lawful contract, and they only open the question, whether he has so bound himself. But in the other forms of obligation and of action, and where it can always be open to inquiry, what the nature and terms of the contract were and xvhether the contract was reasonable and beneficial, , *7minor may as well be bound by an express, as by an implied contract for necessaries. This is often beneficial to the minor, and enables him to avail himself of any stipulations in his favor. If such an express contract should be held to be wholly void, and the party furnishing the minor with necessaries should be remitted to his action on the implied contract, he would recover upon a quantum vale bant or quantum meruit, though above the stipulated prices. The rule as above qualified, that a minor shall only be bound by such a species of express contract, and in such a form of action, as leaves the nature, terms and consideration of the contract open to inquiry, and then only by such a contract as shall appear at the time to have been fair, reasonable and beneficial to the minor, affords a sufficient security to the rights of minors.

And it appears to the Court, taking into consideration the age of the minor when the contract was made, and the circumstances attending it, that it was reasonable and beneficial. It is to be considered, that the employer took upon himself the risk of the health, life and bodily and mental capacity of the plaintiff to labor. Had he been sick or otherwise incapable of performing any labor, the defendant was nevertheless, by the terms of his contract, bound to support him. These considerations may have rendered the contract equal and beneficial at the time, although in the event, which could not then be foreseen, the plaintiff’s labor may have been of greater value than the subsistence and education- which he obtained as an equivalent. The circumstance also, that the contract was made with the consent and approbation of the guardian, evinced by his becoming a party to it, goes strongly to show that the contract was entered into deliberately and with a just regard to the rights and security of the minor. And it Would be injurious rather than beneficial to minors, to hold that a contract thus made is of no legal force and effect.

We think the instructions of the Court were correct, and there must be

Judgment on the verdict.