Appeal by plaintiff from an interlocutory judgment of the City Court of the city of
The complaint states three separate causes of action. The first is as follows:
“ First. That heretofore and immediately prior to the 30th day of October, 1906, an ag’reement was entered into between this plaintiff and the above named defendant wherein and whereby the above named defendant promised and agreed to and with this plaintiff that if this plaintiff would purchase any shares of the capital stock of the Columbia Carbide Company of South Dakota, a foreign corporation, duly organized and existing under the laws of the State of South Dakota, and the corporation was not within a reasonable length of time thereafter a success, or the plaintiff did not realize upon her interest in the corporation, that the said defendant would purchase from the plaintiff the said shares of stock so purchased by her, and would pay to the plaintiff the amount that the said plaintiff should pay therefor, and interest.
“ Second. That this plaintiff fully kept and performed all the terms of said agreement on her part to be performed, and on said 30-th day of October, 1906, purchased and took ten. shares of the said capital stock of • the Columbia Carbide Company of South Dakota paying therefor the sum of One Hundred ($100) Dollars.
Page 182“ Third. That more than a reasonable length of time has passed since the plaintiff purchased said ten shares of said stock, and the plaintiff has not realized upon her interest in said corporation, and the corporation is not a success, but ife in a dormant condition doing no business, and the plaintiff has been unable to realize upon her interest in the corporation, upon her shares of stock, and on or about the 30th day of September, 1911, the said plaintiff tendered to the said defendant the said ten shares of stock and demanded from the said defendant that she purchase the same from her and pay her the said sum of One hundred ($100) Dollars, the amount that the said plaintiff had paid therefor, and interest, but the said defendant has neglected and refused so to do. By reason whereof there is now due and owing by the defendant to the plaintiff the said sum of One hundred ($100') Dollars with interest thereon from October 30'th, 1905.”
The other two causes of action are identical except as to dates and number of shares purchased, and it is only necessary therefore to pass upon the status of the first cause of action. The learned chief justice of the court below, in the opinion, says: ‘1 There is here a mere naked promise or bare agreement. It is not shown whether the agreement was oral or in writing, and if in writing whether under seal or not. It is not alleged that the stock which the plaintiff purchased belonged to the defendant, or that even a promise, on the part of the plaintiff in return for the promise of the defendant, was made. There is no consideration alleged for the agreement or promise, and a promise for which there is no consideration cannot be enforced at law. Consideration is a material and indispensable element of every contract. In declaring upon a contract not under seal, it is in all cases necessary to .state that it was a contract that imports and implies
The complaint shows that the promise or agreement was a conditional one leaving it to the option of the plaintiff to do or not to do a certain thing; that the plaintiff did act upon the promise, purchased the stock, failed to realize upon it from the corporation, offered it to defendant and demanded the repayment of the money plaintiff had paid for it.
These allegations, in my opinion, bring the case clearly within the principle that a promise, although void when made for want of mutuality of obligation, becomes valid and binding upon the performance by the promisee of that in consideration of which the promise was made. While there was want of consideration in the inception of the agreement and the consideration was suspended, when the plaintiff performed there was a consideration which related back to the original agreement. Willetts v. Sun Mutual Ins. Co., 45 N. Y. 45; Marie v. Garrison, 83 id. 14; Reynolds v. Guilbert, 13 Hun, 301.
I think the third defense of laches is insufficient and the fourth separate defense of want of consideration is superfluous, being covered by what is apparently intended to be a general denial in the answer.
The interlocutory judgment should therefore be re
Bij.ub, J., concurs.