Robbins v. Potter
Robbins v. Potter
Opinion of the Court
The case which the bill of exceptions presents, in connection with the pleadings, is a very peculiar one, and requires a careful application of the rules of law which govern it. The plaintiff sues to recover compensation for services in the defendant’s family, and for money paid to his use at his request. She declares in a name which is not bis; and which does not indicate any relation between them; and in the usual form. The answer denies any contract between them, express or implied ; and it also alleges that whatever services were rendered or money paid by her were performed and expended while she was living with the defendant as his wife, acting and holding herself out in that capacity. It does not aver that she was his wife, or that he supposed or believed that she was his wife.
But on the other part of the case we think the plaintiff’s exceptions must be sustained. The claim is for money paid at his request, and for debts which were due from him to a third person. The payments, it is true, were under circumstance.-'
If all the evidence offered had been heard, and had sustained the offer of proof, the case would have stood thus : The parties were competent to make the contract declared on. Past cohabitation is in itself a legal consideration for a promise to pay money; and is certainly no defence to an action on an express promise to repay money actually advanced. The plaintiff testified to an express promise of the defendant to pay her the money which she advanced to discharge a debt of bis already incurred. It was possible that this promise was made from time to time, as she advanced the money, without any agreement or understanding that the cohabitation should continue; and if the jury should find this to be the true state of the case, there would be no legal objection to the plaintiff’s recovery. The evidence offered should have been admitted, and the jury should not have been restricted to the consideration of a partial and garbled presentation of the facts. If the defendant had pleaded that the plaintiff was his wife, or if the evidence had shown that she had imposed upon him in assuming to contract a marriage, the rule of law would be different, and she might have been estopped to deny the existence of the marital relation. But upon the state of facts which she offered to prove, there was no injustice to him in disclosing the whole truth. Between these two adulterers there could be no deception, and no estoppel.
But on the other hand, while we think the court below erred in ruling as a matter of law what was only a strong presumption of fact upon the evidence, and which should therefore have been submitted to the jury, it is obvious that upon a new tiiat
cited Booth v. Hodgson, 6 T. R. 405; Phalen v. Clark, 19 Conn. 421; Gibson v. Pearsall, 1 E. D. Smith, (N. Y.) 90; Bowry v. Bennet, 1 Camp. 348.
cited Divoll v. Leadbetter, 4 Pick. 220 ; Gregg v. Wyman, 4 Cush. 322; Spalding v. Preston, 21 Verm. 9; White v. Hunter, 3 Fost. (N. H.) 128; Edwards v. Stevens, 1 Allen, 315; Lord v. Parker, 3 Allen, 127.
Exceptions sustained.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.