190 Pa. 5 | Pa. | 1899
Opinion by
This was an action on a guarantee. The plaintiffs and Keen, the principal debtor, agreed on the amount due by the latter to the former, and there is no dispute as to it. But the defense is that plaintiffs gave Keen receipts which misled defendants by showing larger payments by Keen than had been actually made, and that plaintiffs are thereby estopped. The principal error alleged by appellant, therefore, is that the court permitted plaintiffs to explain and in a manner contradict their own receipts.
The claim of appellants is too broad. The receipts were not per se estoppels. Like other receipts they were open to explanation between the original parties and others not acting to their injury upon the faith of them. But to the extent of such action and any consequent injury, plaintiffs would, be conclusively estopped from disputing the validity of their own writings made for the purpose of being shown to induce action. The learned judge was therefore correct in his view that defendants were bound to show that they had been injured by reliance on the receipts. Without such showing the most important element of estoppel was wanting.
But the judge fell into error in restricting the defendants in their effort to prove the injury. As a necessary first step in that direction they should have been permitted to show how much they had paid Keen. They were guarantors on Keen’s contract for about $13,900 with plaintiffs, and it is the testimony of both parties that defendants, apparently for their own protection, required Keen to produce vouchers for the state of his accounts with plaintiffs, before defendants would make payments to him on their own contract with him. Such vouchers
Judgment reversed and venire de novo awarded.