Judges: Hall
Filed Date: 7/1/1884
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/3/2024
in delivering the opinion of the Court, said: In order to constitute a contract there must be an agreement, either express or implied, between parties, for the doing or not doing some specified thing. (Code, Sec. 2714.) This agreement becomes a contract of record when it has been declared and adjudicated by a Court having jurisdiction, or whenever it “is entered of record in obedience to or in carrying out the judgment of a Court.” (Code, Sec. 2716.) It is essential to a contract that the parties assent to its terms. (Code, Secs. 2720, 2727.) How can this be predicated of a tort, either to person or to property? (5 McLean, 172; 3 Burr., 1548.) In 21 Wall., 203, it was said by Field, X, who delivered the opinion, “ It may be doubted whether a judgment founded on an agreement, express or implied, is a contract within the meaning of the constitutional prohibition. It is sometimes called by text writers a contract of record, because it establishes a legal obligation to pay the amount recovered, and by a fiction of the law, where there is a legal obligation to pay, a promise to pay