Court Opinion

ID: 8193593
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 23:16:45.023274+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:40:41.296835
License: Public Domain

The following opinion was filed January 10, 1922:
Rosenberry, J.
The court clearly had jurisdiction of the subject matter of the action, and as plaintiff relies upon a new contract and not upon the original note or indorsement, it not appearing when the new contract was made, the order overruling the demurrer upon the second and third grounds assigned needs no further discussion. It is the contention of appellant that the complaint states' no1 cause of action for two reasons:
First, no consideration is shown.
Second, the offer was to a limited class of persons; that is, to those who “should have at any time lost any money in any of defendant’s business ventures,” and the plaintiff has not shown himself to be one of that class.
On the part of the plaintiff it is claimed that the com*324plaint sets forth a unilateral contract which came into existence by reason of the performancia of an act by the defendant, to wit, by the defendant bringing to the plaintiff’s attention the fact of the indebtedness set out in the complaint and that the performance of that act constituted an acceptance. If it be assumed that the offer was one made with the intention that it should become by acceptance a contract and that it was properly accepted, the question then arises whether or not there is a consideration sufficient to support the contract.
“The requirement ordinarily stated for the sufficiency of consideration to support a promise is, in substance, a detriment incurred by the promisee or a benefit received by the promisor at the request of the promisor. For unilateral contracts, which were the earliest recognized by the law and may still be regarded as the typical form, the statement is as accurate as a brief general, statement can be.” Willis-ton, .Contracts, § 102; Drovers’ Deposit Nat. Bank v. Tichenor, 156 Wis. 251, 145 N. W. 777, and cases cited.
• The plaintiff contends that there was a consideration, and that was the benefit derived by the defendant in that the offer and acceptance tended to- create in the minds of the-public the absolute honesty, fairness, and sincerity of those interested in teaching applied psychology in order to interest the public in the discussion and in order that the defendant might have the financial benefit which would thus accrue to him, it being alleged “that it was at all times herein involved and is now essential for the successful conduct of the defendant’s business as a public speaker on the subject of ‘Applied Psychology,’ to create in the minds of the public the definite, decided impression that said defendant was and had been during his entire life absolutely' sincere, trustworthy, and unqualifiedly honest.” The difficulty with the contention of the plaintiff is that the alleged benefit proceeds not from the act performed in acceptance of the offer,- but rather from the performance by the de*325fendant of his promise. The mere act of acceptance by-bringing to the attention of the defendant the fact of his prior liability did not confer any benefit upon the plaintiff nor did it amount to a detriment to the defendant in a legal sense. If the mere trouble involved in making an acceptance amounted to a consideration, then there would in every conceivable offer and acceptance be involved a consideration. In order that' a contract may arise, three things must concur: first, the offer; second, the acceptance; and third, the consideration. The case mainly relied upon by the plaintiff is Carlill v. Carbolic Smoke Ball Co. [1892] L. R. 2 Q. B. Div. 484. In that case the defendants were proprietors and vendors of a medical preparation called the Carbolic Smoke Ball, and they inserted in the Pall Mall Gazette the following advertisement:
'TOO/, reward will be paid by the Carbolic Smoke Ball Company to any person who contracts the increasing epidemic influenza colds, or any disease caused by taking cold, after having used the ball three times daily for two weeks, according to the -printed directions supplied with each ball. 1000/. is deposited with the Alliance Bank, Regent street, showing our sincerity in the matter.”
The price of the ball was given as ten shillings, the price for refilling as five shillings. The plaintiff read the advertisement and on the faith of it bought one of defendants’ carbolic smoke balls and used it as directed from November 20 to January 17, .1892, when she was attacked by influenza. She thereupon brought action against the defendants to recover the 100 pounds promised in their advertisement. The defendants pleaded that there was no contract between the parties and other defenses. The court said:
“It may be that, of the many readers of the advertisement, very few of the sensible ones would have entertained expectations that in the event of the smoke ball failing to act as a preventive against the disease, the defendants had any *326intention to fulfil their attractive and alluring promise; but it must be remembered that such advertisements do not appeal so much to the wise and thoughtful as to the credulous and weak portions of the community; and if the vendor of an article, whether it be medicine smoke or anything else, with a view to increase its sale or use, thinks fit publicly to promise to all who buy or use it that, to those who shall not find it as surely efficacious as it is represented by him to be, he will pay a substantial sum of money, he must not be surprised if occasionally he is held to his promise.
“I notice that in the present case the promise is of 100¿. revoard; but the substance of the offer is to pay the named sum as compensation for the failure of the article to produce the guaranteed effect of the two weeks’ daily use as directed. Such daily use was sufficient legal consideration to support the promise.”
The benefit which was derived by the defendant in that case was the purchase of its product and the use of it by the plaintiff in the manner directed. The same is true in other cases of the same class. In the present case there was no use of anything by the plaintiff, nor did the plaintiff purchase anything, nor did the plaintiff perform any act other than the mere act of acceptance, which, as we have pointed out, does not amount to a consideration. That there may be an acceptance by an act, that the performance of the act may identify one of the parties, complete the contract, and amount to a consideration, there can be no doubt, a familiar instance being the offer of a reward for the performance of a certain act, and its performance by a party; but in those cases the one accepting performs some act other than the mere acceptance and either confers a benefit upon the promisor or suffers a detriment. The .present case is clearly distinguishable from that class of cases.
We do not find it necessary to determine whether the defendant was one of the class of persons described in the offer.
*327By the Court. — Order reversed, and cause remanded with directions to sustain the demurrer.
A motion for a rehearing was denied, with $25 costs, on March 14, 1922.