Court Opinion

ID: 3627681
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 00:07:56.487676+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:43:04.629923
License: Public Domain

The interlocutory judgment in this case is based upon the want of a legal consideration to support the second agreement of copartnership, or, as it is called for convenience in the briefs of counsel, the compromise agreement. If the compromise agreement is held valid, the accounting should not extend beyond its date. If held invalid, the accounting should extend to the 24th of June, 1879, the date of the first agreement of copartnership.
The question first to be considered upon this appeal is whether there is a valid consideration to support the compromise agreement. And, secondly, if there is a want of such consideration, are the findings sufficient in substance and form to support the determination based upon the want of such consideration?
It is elementary law, that an adequate consideration is essential to the binding force of a contract, whatever may be the form or the subject of the contract. Whether the contract is original, creating a status or condition of things that did not before exist, or whether it is secondary, changing the condition of things created by a former or existing contract, a consideration is as necessary to the secondary as to the primary contract. Hence a later contract, having precisely the elements of a former contract, is invalid and incapable of enforcement, for the reason that it *Page 100 
has no consideration. It becomes necessary, therefore, to analyze these two contracts of partnership and learn just what each contained, in order that we may see whether the party, who is alleged to have relinquished or modified a right or advantage that he had under the first, did so upon a good consideration. If he has not, and could not by a possibility derive any benefit from the relinquishment, there is no binding relinquishment, and he may still assert and maintain all the terms and rights to which he was entitled under the former agreement, and the former agreement is the only obligatory agreement between the parties.
Now, what were the rights of the parties under the former agreement of partnership, and which of them has been changed by the latter and what was the consideration for the change? This is the true test of all contracts, and, that, too, quite aside from duress or fraud. Whether or not the agreement was voluntary only goes to the state of mind of one of the contracting parties, and has reference to the competency of the party to make a binding contract.
And so fraud in the making of a contract will justify a rescission, without regard to the consideration. The element of fraud in a contract may, and often does, have more relation to the state of mind which the fraud has induced in one of the contracting parties than the value of the consideration.
But, in my apprehension of this case, there was a total and palpable want of a legal consideration moving the plaintiffs to the making of the second contract of copartnership.
The copartnership had been agreed upon verbally in every detail and particular. The parties had entered upon its performance, and continued to do so from June, 1879, to February, 1880, in which time the copartnership had made $60,000, and had established a lucrative and promising business, with ample credit and cash to continue it, when the defendant Theodore, for the first time, soon to be followed by his father in the assertion, pretended that there had been no partnership, and that the plaintiffs were not entitled to share in the profits *Page 101 
earned for the reason that written articles of copartnership had not been signed, and the plaintiffs had not paid the sums they were to contribute. The hollowness of these reasons is manifest from the evidence and the findings, that S.O. Barnum, who was not, and was not to be, a partner, was to procure the articles of copartnership to be drawn by his brother-in-law in Utica, at some future time, and that when they were prepared they were never signed by defendants Theodore and Chatfield or presented to the plaintiffs, signed by Theodore and Chatfield, with a request or requirement that the plaintiffs should sign them.
And as to paying in the capital to be contributed, it was to be done when required of the plaintiffs and Chatfield, and that of Chatfield was to be furnished him by defendant S.O. Barnum: and the same was never furnished him or offered to be furnished him by Stephen.
The terms of the new partnership were precisely the terms of the old copartnership, except that the copartnership was to date from the 10th day of January, 1880, the day of the completion of the inventory, showing that there had been made in the copartnership business $60,000, instead of the 24th of June, 1879, the day the copartnership was entered into, and, of course, before any profits had been made. It is true the plaintiffs were credited upon the books containing the copartnership accounts the sum of $3,000.
But they were each entitled to be paid or to be credited upon the same books the sum of $12,000, the share of each of them in the profits of $60,000.
This is a case where a party has received a smaller instead of a larger sum, undoubtedly his due, and now it is sought to be maintained that the smaller sum paid and satisfied the larger sum. This is not like the case of disputed or forgotten or erroneous items of claims and counter-claims, and of sums which affect and change amounts or aggregations. There is and can be in this case no doubt or difference of opinion or honest dispute about the amounts or nature or character of these two sums. *Page 102 
They are known and fixed at $3,000 as the smaller sum and $12,000, at least, as the larger sum. All the facts and elements resulting in those two sums of money, or in anywise relating to them, were fixed unalterably and were known perfectly, and so were incapable of misapprehension by the parties.
Now, as I apprehend the law in relation to the consideration essential to compromise or substituted agreements, there must be some material element of doubt, and that both parties are, or the promisee, at least, is acting in good faith in respect to such doubtful element. I will not stop to give the facts, but simply the language employed by the judges in their opinions in a few leading cases involving the question of consideration in this class of contracts. "The compromise of a claim wholly destitute of color or foundation, or not made in good faith, is not a good consideration for an agreement." If it appear that the party knew that the claim made (and compromise) was groundless or fictitious" (Feeter v. Weber, 78 N.Y. 334, 336, 338), "the claim must be a doubtful one." (White v. Hoyt, 73 N.Y. 505.) Judge RUGER quotes, with approval, and applies to the case then under consideration, in Vanderbilt v. Schreyer (91 N.Y. 401), the rule as stated by POLLOCK, that "neither the promise to do a thing, nor the actual doing of it, will be a good consideration if it is a thing which the party is bound to do by the general law, or by a subsisting contract with the other party." He also quotes the rule, as stated by Parsons on Contracts (vol. 2, 437): "Nor is the performance of that which the party was under a previous valid legal obligation to do a sufficient consideration for a new contract." And Judge RUGER, in his opinion, cites numerous cases illustrating the rule. (Crosby v. Wood, 6 N.Y. 369;  Bartlett v. Wyman, 14 Johns. 260; Ayres v. C.R.I. P.R. Co., 52 Iowa 478; Conover v. Stillwell, 34 N.J.L. 54;Reynolds v. Nugent, 25 Ind. 328; Harris v. Carter, 3 E. 
B. 559; Stilk v. Myrick, 2 Camp. 317, and several additional cases.) "It is essential that the claim be sustainable at law or in equity, or at least that it be doubtful either in its right
or amount." (Sullivan v. Collins, 18 Iowa 228.) *Page 103 
"The surrender, forbearance or assignment of a claim having no legal validity is not a sufficient consideration for a promise." (Kidder v. Blake, 45 N.H. 530.) If we have reference to the cases cited by the appellant, we find those cases contain the same essential qualities in the consideration to support a compromise agreement. In Miles v. Estate Company (L.R., 32 Ch. Div. 266), COTTON, L.J., uses this language: "Now, what I understand to be the law is this, if there is, in fact, aserious claim honestly made, the abandonment of the claim is a good consideration for a contract. Now, by "honest claim" I think is meant this, "that a claim is honest if the claimant does not know facts, or does not know that his claim is unsubstantial, or if he does not know facts, to his knowledge, unknown to the other party, which show that his claim is a bad one." COCKBURN, C.J., says in Callisher v. Bischoffsheim (L.R., 5 Q.B. 449); "If he, bona fide, believes he has a fair chance (of sustaining his claim), then his forbearance (or surrender or abandonment of his claim, or a portion of it) will constitute a good consideration."
It seems to me it would be altogether unreasonable to argue, in view of the evidence and the findings in this case, that the Barnums made this claim bona fide, or could have entertained an honest belief that there had not been a partnership existing between them and the plaintiff from June 24, 1879, and while these profits were being earned, and down to the time of their discovery of the sixty thousand profits in January and February, 1880, and, therefore, such a belief could not constitute a valid and legal consideration for the substituted or compromise agreement. Nor can I see, in view of the evidence and findings in it, either made or possible to be made, that any other consideration for the support of the second agreement can be extracted.
If it should be argued or insisted that this verbal agreement of copartnership for three years was void under the statute of frauds, it might be effectually answered that that was not the point of controversy or difference that arose between these parties, and is not the question upon this appeal. Assuming, *Page 104 
for the purpose of considering such contention upon the part of the defendants, that a verbal contract of copartnership beyond one year is void and incapable of enforcement, that has nothing to do with this case. This case concerns a verbal contract made
and actually executed from June to the succeeding February, and the fruits and results of the executed agreement. If the plaintiffs in this case were seeking to enforce the continuance of the first copartnership, that question would be before us, and there are some quite authoritative decisions that would seem to support such a contention upon the part of the plaintiffs. (Nat.Bk. of Schuylerville v. Vanderwerker, 74 N.Y. 224.)
But that case is not here, and we need not discuss it. What we are called upon to dispose of there is no legal question about, and that is, that an executed partnership, or one in process of execution, is valid, so far as executed, and confers the rights which are under consideration in this case. It is very manifest that it was not the question whether or not a copartnership existed between these parties, and if not, the desire to form one, that gave rise to this controversy, but it was how this large amount of profits should be divided, and the denial of the partnership was the means to that end.
If it shall be said that the plaintiffs made this second agreement because there was a doubt about the legal continuance of the first agreement, it may be replied that the second agreement did not cure the defects of the old, for the second agreement was not in writing, and so was terminated by Theodore the same as the first when it suited his pleasure so to do.
And so of the other pretext of the Barnums for the failure of the first agreement, viz., the delay of plaintiffs in paying into the firm the portions of capital that they had agreed to pay. There was delay and failure, in respect to those payments by plaintiffs, after making the second agreement, and the defendant Chatfield, who was to have been furnished under the first agreement with $5,000 by defendant S.O. Barnum, never put in anything toward the capital except the *Page 105 
credit of the $3,000 upon the occasion of the formation of the second partnership. My conclusion is that there was no valid and legal consideration to support the compromise agreement.
The remaining consideration in this case is whether the findings are, or can be, made within the settled rules of practice sufficient to support the judgment and order appealed from. We may here properly remark that it should not be the disposition of courts to allow a mere technical rule of practice to delay for a long time or to defeat the accomplishment of justice between litigants. The trial court found from the evidence all the facts relating to the formation, terms and execution of the first agreement of copartnership, and the court also found all the facts relating to the second agreement of copartnership, and found, as a conclusion of law from the facts so found, that the second agreement was void for want of a valid and legal consideration. It seems to me there is necessarily involved in the findings made the finding of the absence of any element which could constitute a valid consideration for the alleged compromise. Such as that there was a doubtful claim presented by the defendants to the plaintiffs, or that there was an honest and bona fide claim, or the belief in such a claim, on the part of the defendants, or that the defendant did not know that their claim was groundless or fictitious. If the defendants had a doubtful claim, or the defendants believed they had a claim, or honestly and in good faith put forward a doubtful or any claim, and abated anything therefrom in forming the second agreement, that, as matter of law, would have constituted a sufficient consideration for the compromise agreement. The conclusion of the trial court, that there was no consideration, necessarily negatives or is a finding that none of those elements or essentials to a good consideration existed in fact.
If the defendants desired a specific finding that any of those elements of a good consideration existed as a matter of fact, they should have requested a specific finding in that regard, *Page 106 
but they failed to do so and they cannot now be heard to complain. It cannot be a reasonable rule or requirement when a court has found all the facts requested, or facts sufficient to justify its conclusions of law, that it should be required, and without a request therefor, to write out a finding or a special plea or an argument of nice distinction wherein the evidence or the reasoning failed to sustain the contention of the unsuccessful party.
It seems to me very plain that the evidence in this case is ample to justify a finding that none of those essentials of a valid consideration existed, and where that is the case and a specific finding is necessary to support the judgment, and no request was made therefor, resort may be had to the evidence for the purpose of sustaining the judgment. (Everson v. City ofSyracuse, 100 N.Y. 577-584; Moores v. Townshend,
102 id. 387; Grant v. Morse, 22 id. 323; Oberlander v. Spiess,
45 id. 175, and cases there cited.)
The order appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
All concur with FOLLETT, Ch. J., except POTTER, J., dissenting.
Judgment reversed.