11 Mich. 219 | Mich. | 1863
This is a case made after judgment, for a review upon the facts and the law. Brown sued Hazen in assumpsit, upon a promise to pay a note of one Van DerMade. The Court made’ a written finding of facts, and gave judgment for the defendant.
One William Van DerMade was a tenant of defendant, Hazen, working a farm on shares. He had borrowed
But there was no consideration for this promise moving from Brown; he paid nothing, relinquished no right; he merely assented to forego his opposition to Van Der Made’s leaving Hazen’s farm, which he had no shadow of right to prevent. He neither gave up the note or mortgage, nor discharged Van DerMade’s liability as the debtor, nor his lien upon the cow under the mortgage. [He still held the juote and mortgage, and there is some evidence showing that he still claimed his lien upon the cow. Had these papers been given up, or the liability of Van DerMade extinguished at the time of Hazen’s promise to pay the amount, and as a part of the same arrangement between all three of the parties, there would then have been a substitution of Hazen as the debtor in place of Van DerMade; and this would have constituted an original or substantive contract between Hazen and Brown, on which the latter might have maintained an action. But as the paper was not given up, nor the liability of Van DerMade extinguished, and he still continued
Upon this ground, therefore, we concur in the result, with the Court below.
The judgment must be affirmed, with costs.