Case ID: ny-st-rep_4/html/0290-01.html
Source: Caselaw Access Project
Author: {"author": "Earl, J.", "license": "Public Domain", "url": "https://static.case.law/"}
Date Created: 2024-08-24T03:29:51.129683

Lewis Roberts, Resp’t, v. Edward B. Cobb, Ex’r, Etc., App’lt.
    
    
      (Court of Appeals,
    
    
      Filed December 7, 1886.)
    
    Promissory -note—Consideration—Contribution on condition of raising; OF SPECIFIC SUM.-
    A promise to contribute money on condition that pledges for an amount specitied shall be procured is made upon good consideration. Upon the performance of the condition an action will lie for the amount so agreed to be contributed.
    Appeal from a judgment of the supreme court, second department, entered upon a verdict by direction of the court in favor of plaintiff.
    
      James M. Smith, for app’lt; Henry C. Griffin, for resp’t.
    
      
       See S. C. below, 31 Hun, 150; 37 Hun, 643, mem.
      
    
   Earl, J.

The persons interested in the First Baptist Church of Tarrytown had, prior to the first day of May, 1881, been engaged in building a church edifice, and at that-time there was a mortgage upon the church property upon which there was then due about $5,000. An effort was then being made by the church to raise the funds to discharge that mortgage, with a view to the dedication of the church in the near future. Eev. Mr. Horr, the pastor of the church, was active and efficient on its behalf in procuring subscriptions and pledges for that purpose. About the-first of May he called upon Mrs. Barker, defendant’s testatrix, an aged lady, who was a member of the church, and' requested her to make a contribution, and she promised to contribute $2,500 in cash, towards payment of the mortgage, if he would secure pledges for the balance, ($12,500,) and he promised her to make the effort. He at once set about raising the requisite sum, and secured pledges for the • amount during the month. After he had done so, on the-thirty-first day of May, 1881, he called upon Mrs. Barker for the amount of her subscription, and, she, finding it-inconvenient to pay the cash in discharge thereof, executed the instrument set out in the complaint, and delivered it to him. She subsequently paid thereon $500, and this action was brought by the plaintiff, to whom the note was indorsed by the trustees of the church, to recover the balance.

It is entirely clear, we think, that Mr. Horr must be' regarded as having acted for and on behalf of the church in procuring pledges to pay the mortgage. He was not acting in his own interest, and his relations to the church were such that it is a proper, if not an absolutely necessary, inference that he was its agent, acting for it with the sanction and co-operation of its trustees. This money and note which he obtained from Mrs. Barker were immediately delivered to the trustees, and his action approved by them; and all the moneys and subscriptions which he obtained were turned over to the trustees, and used in the discharge of the mortgage. Therefore, whatever he did, and whatever he promised to do, the church did and promised. We have, then a case where Mrs. Barker agreed to give $2,500 for the purpose of discharging the mortgage, on condition that the church would raise the balance by voluntary subscriptions, and the church promised her to make the effort. It did make the effort, and performed the condition, and therefore her promise became obligatory, and the note which she gave in fulfillment thereof is based upon a sufficient consideration. Trustees of Hamilton College v. Stewart, 1 N. Y., 581; Barnes v. Perine, 12 N. Y., 18; Marie v. Garrison, 83 id., 14; Pars. Cont. [5th ed.] 452, and notes.

But it could not be held that Mr. Horr did not act as the agent of the church, then it would follow that he acted for himself in procuring the subscriptions, intending to present the money obtained to the church for the discharge of its mortgage, and the same conclusion would still be reached. In that event, Mrs. Barker promised to give him $2,500 if he would procure subscriptions for the remaining $12,500. He accepted the offer, and performed the condition, and thus there was an adequate consideration to uphold her promise. He called upon her to perform her promise, and took her promissory note, payable to the trustees of the church, in discharge of the obligation to him. That note was founded upon a sufficient consideration, and was valid in the hands of the trustees, and they gave good title thereto by their indorsement to the plaintiff.

So in any view that can be taken of this case the judgment was right and should be affirmed.

All concur.