65 Mo. App. 407 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1896
This action is brought upon an oral promise, claimed to have been made by the defendants to one Etzel for the benefit of plaintiffs. The petition charges that Etzel, being indebted to the plaintiffs in the sum of $100, and to the defendants in the sum of $350, agreed to transfer and did transfer to the defendants certain property in satisfaction of the debt due from him to them and in consideration .of their additional promise, that they would pay his debt to the plaintiffs.
On the trial of the cause before a jury the plaintiffs recovered a verdict and judgment for $50. The defendants appeal, and assign for error that there is no evidence to support the verdict; that the court erred in admitting illegal evidence against them, and that it also erred in its instructions to the jury.
No disposition was made of the goods on the day of this interview. The next day the defendant Doll called upon Etzel with a justice of the peace, and it was agreed that the goods should be appraised and that the defendants should take them at their appraised valuation. The defendants and Etzel had the goods appraised at their cost value, which was $352, and Etzel made an absolute bill of sale to the defendants for that amount and turned the goods over to them. Nothing was said on that day to. the defendants, or either of them, touching plaintiffs’ claim.
The law in this state is settled that one for whose benefit a promise is made upon a sufficient consideration may sue the promisor upon it, and that the promise is not one within the statute of frauds. Robbins v.
The court also erred in admitting evidence. It permitted the plaintiffs, against defendants’ objection, to give evidence of what Etzel said to the appraisers in the defendants’ absence. As this was mere hearsay, it is not conceivable on what theory it was admissible. Nor is it apparent on what theory Etzel’s wife could testify as to her husband’s statements, made to her in the absence of third parties. Such statements were mere hearsay and were, moreover, not provable by the wife, being protected by privilege independent of the ground ■of identity of interest. 1 Creenleaf on Evidence, sec. 254.
The only error in the plaintiffs’ instructions is that there was no evidence to support them. As abstract propositions of law they are correct.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded.