Failure of Consideration
A special form of fraud was recognized in the attempt to enforce a formal contract induced by a consideration that had failed. The Romans did not fully attain the English doctrine of a valuable consideration, a formal contract did not need a consideration to support it, but if there was in fact a consideration intended, which was the real inducement of the promise, and this consideration failed, it was deemed a fraud to insist upon performance. The consideration having failed, the promise was said to be sine causa and in an action thereon the defense of fraud could be set up. The effect of the admission of this defense, after it became allowed, was that it rendered even a formal contract stipulation non-enforceable unless made gratuitously or for a consideration that did not fail 1.
1 William Alexander Hunter. A Systematic and Historical Exposition of Roman Law in the Order of a Code. p.597.