72 Mass. 446 | Mass. | 1856
The declaration alleged a sale directly to the defendant ; and, to maintain the action, the fact that the defendant was the purchaser must be established. If the sale was shown by the evidence to be a sale to Green, of course this action must fail. Had the plaintiffs instituted their action against the defendant upon an alleged promise by him to pay a debt of Green’s arising from a sale of goods to Green, the defendant must in his answer have denied that he ever made any written promise, and set up a defence under the statute of frauds. But where the plaintiffs’ case, as stated in their declaration, is limited to a promise to pay for goods sold and delivered to the defendant himself, it is certainly otherwise. If it be shown by the evidence that the sale was made to a third person, it would not be competent for the plaintiffs then to resort to evidence tending to show