10 Barb. 573 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1850
Upon the evidence the plaintiffs were the proper parties to bring the action. They were the parties in interest and entitled to the- recovery. Ehle was a mere guarantor. {Code, § 111.) Neither was there any error in permitting the plaintiffs to re-examine Ehle after he had been improved as a witness by the defendant. He was clearly interested in the event of the action, and unless made competent by § 398 of the code could not have been called by the plaintiffs, in whose favor he was interested. But the defendant, by calling him as a witness, waived the objection, and made him a witness generally in the cause. (Varick v. Jackson, 2 Wend. 166. Fulton Bank v. Stafford, Id. 483.) The evidence that Ehle had the day before the consummation of the contract, and during the pendency of the negotiation, told the defendant of the ailments of the horses, was properly admitted by the justice. It disproved the fraud and negatived the concealment of the defects complained of. (Murray v. Bethune, 1 Wend. 191.) The only remaining question is as to the validity of the undertaking upon which the action is brought. The only consideration for the promise is the agreement of the payee to exchange his horses for the two yoke of oxen of the defendant, and if that agreement is void by the statute of frauds the promise is without consideration and void. The property was óf a greater value than fifty dollars, and the agreement is therefore within