Court Opinion

ID: 7964035
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 00:48:56.903271+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:34:35.278067
License: Public Domain

VaNderburgh, J.
It appears, from the record in this case, that on the lltli day of September, 1878, the defendant Uri L. Lamprey was the owner of certain-lots in the city of St. Paul, described in the complaint, and that at and prior to that date the defendant Jeanne B. Lamprey was indebted to Morris Lamprey, the plaintiffs’ intestate, in a large sum,-amounting to $13,333.33, and at that date, to secure this indebtedness, the defendants executed to him a warranty deed, absolute upon its face, of all of said lands, and, as a part of the same transaction, Morris Lamprey entered into an agreement with the defendant Jeanne B. Lamprey, of the daté of September 14, 1878, whereby he undertook and agreed to reconvey, the same lands to her or her assigns, upon being paid said sum, with interest at 8 per cent., within two years; and she covenanted on her part, in consideration thereof, to pay said sum and interest, together with any taxes which said Morris might pay on the property, with interest thereon at 10 per *154cent., all to be paid within two years; upon which agreement was at the same time endorsed the individual guaranty of the defendant Uri L- Lamprey for the fulfilment of the agreement on her part according to its terms. Upon the same day the defendants paid upon said indebtedness, including taxes, the sum o'f $3,644.87, duly endorsed upon such agreement by said Morris Lamprey at that date. Upon the trial the defendants introduced evidence of another and later agreement, purporting to bear date October 14, 1878, and to have been executed by Morris Lamprey alone, and without any guaranty of the defendant Uri. The defence is predicated upon this last agreement, which is claimed to have superseded the first agreement, and which refers to and recites the terms of the same, including the guaranty, and further stipulates as follows:
“Now,, therefore, for value received, and in consideration of the payment to me by said Jeanne R. Lamprey upon said indebtedness of the sum of $3,644.87, and of one dollar to me in hand paid by the said Uri L. Lamprey, the receipts whereof by me are hereby acknowledged, I, the said Morris Lamprey, do hereby acknowledge that the whole balance of said sum of $18,333.33 has been paid to me by said Uri L. Lamprey, save and except the sum of five thousand seven hundred and fifty-five and 13-100 dollars, ($5,755.13;) and I do hereby promise and agree to, at any time within five years from the date hereof, upon request and upon being paid said sum of $5,755.13, and such taxes as I may pay upon said lands, (without any interest on either,) convey unto the said Jeanne R. Lamprey, her heirs or assigns, all of the said lands, in manner and by such deed as is provided for in our said agreement.

“Dated St. Paid, October 24, A. D. 1878.

“Morris Lamprey.” [Seal.]
The district court held that, because this contract was under seal, evidence could not be received to show that the same was a mere voluntary agreement and without consideration, and accordingly substantially determined that the same was valid and binding, and that this action, which was brought to foreclose the first agreement, could not be maintained, because superseded by the second agreement, which was not yet due. The court granted a new trial, on the ground *155of its alleged error in refusing to receive and consider evidence that the same was without consideration, and the defendants appeal.
1. It may be safely stated to be the correct rule that equity always requires an actual consideration in the case of executory agreements, and permits evidence as to the want'of it without regard to the seal. Pomeroy on Contracts, § 57; Adams, Equity, *78. Equity “will not extend its peculiar remedies to gratuitous promises, even though they be under seal.” Anson on Contracts, 43.
The defendants seek to substitute the contract of October 14th in the place of the previous one, and ask the court to give effect to it accordingly. The application of the rule above stated, in reference to executory covenants, cannot be evaded by the contention that the defendants require no affirmative relief in this action, but that it is sufficient to rely upon this contract as a bar to plaintiffs’ relief, and to show simply that the debt has been satisfied in part, and extended as to the balance. If recognized and established, this agreement-must necessarily be the foundation for equitable aid, in the nature of specific performance, to enable defendants to redeem, and regain the legal title to the lands, upon complying with the terms of the new agreement, as is affirmatively asked in the answer. The defendants have no standing in equity to compel an extension of the time of payment of the debt without interest, upon a gratuitous covenant, or upon a past consideration. While, therefore, except upon the ground of fraud, a court of equity will not interfere with executed gifts or covenants, a party has no claim to its consideration in an action to enforce a mere voluntary executory obligation. The court ruled properly in granting a new trial on this ground, and it is not necessary for us to inquire whether the evidence offered by plaintiff in this behalf might not have been rejected on other grounds. Had the objection been founded upon the state of the pleadings, it might have been obviated by an amendment. Gray v. Barton, 55 N. Y. 68.
2. We are of opinion, however, that the stipulation and acknowledgment of part-payment in this agreement — assuming its genuineness and the integrity of the transaction — may be regarded as evidence of an executed gift pro tanto of the debt, though the instrument be voluntary. It was the privilege of the creditor, if he chose, to make *156such gift, and evidence the execution of it by a receipt or writing under seal delivered to the debtor, which, in such cases, may be the only delivery of which the subject is capable. Gray v. Barton, 55 N. Y. 68; Ferry v. Stephens, 66 N. Y. 321; Carpenter v. Soule, N. Y. Court of Appeals, 1882; Green v. Langdon, 28 Mich. 221; Stewart v. Hidden, 13 Minn. 43.
Order affirmed.