The plaintiff’s evidence on trial tended to show that, prior to 1851, he and the defendant severally had levied executions, each in his own right and neither having any interest in that of the other, upon distinct but adjoining parcels of land in Hinesburg, which had, before such levies, been conveyed by one Boynton, the debtor in said executions, by a deed of conveyance to one Lyman Dorwin; that Lyman Dorwin had died, and that Noble L. Partch was the administrator of his estate, and, as such administrator, was in possession of the lands so levied on ; that it was claimed by the plaintiff and defendant that the deed from Boynton to Lyman Dorwin was fraudulent and void as to Boynton’s creditors ; that the rights of the plaintiff and defendant under their respective levies depended on the same question, viz., the invalidity of the said deed, — and that they so understood the matter, and believed that the practical effect of a suit to test that question, with a recovery therein, in the name of either, would be a surrender by the administrator of the possession of the land embraced in both levies ; that, after a considerable negotiation as to which should begin the suit, it was finally agreed that the plaintiff should do so ;' that thereupon, in August, 1851, the plaintiff and defendant entered into an oral contract that the plaintiff should commence and prosecute an action of ejectment upon his levy against said administrator, and that the defendant should pay to the plaintiff one-half of the expenses of so doing; that it was then and there mutually expected that the defendant would be called as a witness for the plaintiff on the trial of said action ; and that the said
The present action is indebitatus assumpsit for money paid.
The defendant pleaded (1) the general issue, (2) non assumpsit infra sex annos, and (3) actio non aecrévit infra sex annos. The action was commenced on 2nd March, 1860. The county court on the trial ruled, and instructed the jury, that if the contract as claimed by the plaintiff, and as his evidence tended to prove, was, satisfactorily made out, the plaintiff was entitled to recover one-half of all the expenses of said action against said administrator, with interest thereon from the time of such payments, less what the plaintiff had received for the costs in said action. The •defendant excepted to this ruling of the court, and several
I. The defendant insists that there was no consideration for his alleged promise. The plaintiff’s evidence tended to show that he and the defendant had a similar interest, dependent upon the settlement of the same question, — that question being in respect to the validity of the deed executed by Boynton to Lyman Dorwin, — and that they so understood the matter, and each believed that the practical effect of a suit and recovery by either would enure to the' mutual benefit of both; and that the commencement of the action by the plaintiff against the administrator of Lyman Dorwin was the result of considerable negotiation between the plaintiff and the defendant, and of the express promise of the defendant to share equally in its expenses. Under the ruling of the court the jury have found that these facts were satisfactorily established by the testimony. The action which the plaintiff commenced against the administrator of Lyman Dorwin may therefore properly be considered as having been commenced “at the special instance and request” of the defendant, and for the purposes of the defendant as well as for those of the plaintiff. In Adams v. Dansey, 6 Bing. 505, (19 E. C. L.,) the plaintiff, an occupier of lands, having been sued with others by the vicar for tithes, gave up the occupation, and quitted the parish during the progress of the suit; upon which the defendant, a land owner in the parish who had a similar interest in resisting the vicar’s claim, undertook to indemnify the plaintiff from all costs if- he would suffer the defendant to defend the suit in his, the plaintiff’s, name ; and it was held that there was a -sufficient consideration for the defendant’s promise. So in Goodspeed v. Fuller, 46 Maine 141, it was held that if the defendant in a suit at law, at the request of a third person, permits him to assume the defence upon a promise of such third person to indemnify him and pay all costs recovered against him, such a promise was not void for want of consideration. It is not essential that the consideration should be adequate, in point of actual value, the law having no means of deciding this matter, and leaving the parties to the free exercise of their judgments in respect to the benefits to be derived from their bargains ; and
II. Was the defendant’s agreement void as violating any rule of law, or as being against public policy? It is claimed by the defendant that the purpose of the agreement was to pervert or control the course of justice. This claim seems to rest upon the assumption that the mutual expectation of the parties, at the time of making the agreement, that the defendant would be called as a witness in the suit to be commenced by the plaintiff against the administrator of Lyman Dorwin, was itself a part of the agreement. We do not so interpret ihe statement in'the bill of exceptions in reference to this mutual expectation. It may be conceded, as was held in Stanley v. Jones, 7 Bing. 369, (20 E. C. L.,) that an agreement, by one having no legal interest in the controversy, to procure and furnish evidence, has a direct and manifest tendency to pervert the course of justice, and is consequently illegal; but its this case there was no adventure by the parties for a speculation. They were mutually interested in reference to a supposed legal right, depending on the same question, and their purpose was to test the value of that right. That purpose was neither immoral nor unlawful. It is not expressed in the bill of exceptions that it was mutually expected that the
III. It is claimed that this was a contract to indemnify the plaintiff against his own debts, or to pay him a share of money which he might expend in the payment of his own liabilities, and that it was consequently within the mischief of the statute of frauds, and that the plaintiff’s evidence did not support his declaration for the reason that the money paid by him, not being in discharge of any liability of the defendant, was not paid to the use of the defendant. The agreement, as disclosed by the case, was that the defendant should pay one-half of the expenses of commencing and prosecuting the suit, and the plaintiff’s evidence tended to show that it was part of the original understanding that the plaintiff was to go forward and make the disbursements in the suit, and that the expenses, when ascertained, should be adjusted between the defendant and himself under the agreement. The promise of the defendant was not a contract to indemnify the plaintiff against the plaintiff’s own debts, but was a direct undertaking to repay to him a share of the money which he might pay on account of the expenses of the suit, which were to be incurred at his instance, and in reliance upon his promise. The promise was therefore an original and not a collateral undertaking on the part of the defendant, and. related to his own debt, and not to that of the plaintiff, and it is not within the statute of frauds as being a promise to pay the debt of another person ; Adams v. Dansey, and Goodspeed v. Fuller, ubi supra.
IY. The defendant insists that he was entitled to a verdict on the plea of non assumpsit infra sex annos, and also on the plea of actio non accrevii infra sex annos. The case shows that the plaintiff was to make the disbursements for the expenses of the suit, and that when those expenses were ascertained, they were to be adjusted between the defendant and himself according to the defendant’s agreement. The plaintiff could have no c.ause
■V. We consider the facts stated in the case in respect to Toby’s bill as being equivalent to such an actual payment of it in money by the plaintiff as would make the defendant liable for his share of it according to his agreement.
VI. The effect of the defendant’s undertaking and conduct was to request the plaintiff to pay the expenses of the suit, for the purpose of effecting a common object in which they were mutually interested, and the plaintiff did pay those expenses. This was money paid by the plaintiff at the defendant’s request. The common count in indebitatus assumpsit for money paid is maintainable in every case in which the plaintiff has paid money to a third party at the request, express or implied, of the defendant, and with an undertaking, express or implied, on his part to repay it; Chitty on Contracts, (10th Amer. Ed.,) 658-9; Britain v. Lloyd, 14 Mees & W. 762, 773. The request to pay, and. payment according to it, constitute the-debt; and, for money paid for the use of another, interest is due from the time of payment; Gibbs v. Bryant, 1 Pick. 118; Reid v. Rensselaer Glass Factory, 3 Cowen 393, and S. C. in Error, 5 ib. 587; Hodges et al. v. Parker et al., 17 Vt. 242.
We find no error in the decisions of the county court which were excepted to by the defendant, and' the judgment of that court in favor of the plaintiff is affirmed.