12 Iowa 95 | Iowa | 1861
The defendants are sued upon an alleged promise, or undertaking to pay a debt, due from one John Parker to the plaintiffs, consisting of an account and two notes, amounting in the aggregate to $1349.50, in the spring of 1856, when they matured. The liability of the defendants is sought to be made out upon four letters written by them to the plaintiffs, in the years 1856 and 1857; which are filed as exhibits, and made a part of the petition The question whether, in law these letters fixed a liability
The first letter bears date November 28th, 1856, and in substance informs the plaintiffs that Mr. Parker had placed in their hands, his entire property, consisting chiefly in lands, for the purpose of paying his debts. As the lands could not then be converted into money without sacrifice, they proposed, and expressed themselves prepared to secure the claim with ten per cent interest, if they, the plaintiffs, would extend the time of payment twelve months, referring, in conclusion, to certain business men and bankers as to their ability to secure, the debt in the manner proposed.
The second letter bears date December. 26th, 1856, and purports to be an answer to one received, and states that if the plaintiffs should be pleased to send the notes and account against Parker, to them, that they would immediately have the same amply secured in accordance with the proposition made by Mr. Parker through them, remarking that the amount should be amply secured and promptly paid, as they had a sufficient amount of property belonging to Mr. Parker under their control, that could be made available by the time the claim became due.
The third letter of the 4th of February, 1857, simply acknowledges the receipt of the claim, and assures the plaintiffs that they may expect the money about the 1st of December, 1857.
These letters were signed, “ Finch & Crocker,” being the partnership name of the firm; and the foregoing is a fair and just statement of their contents. They disclose quite clearly the relation in which the defendants stood to the debtor, Mr. Parker; not certainly in the character of purchasers whereby they had become the owners of Mr. Parker’s property, in consideration of which they had assumed to pay and had become personally responsible for his debts. There is nothing in the language of these letters which gives the
But it is insisted that in December, 1857, a fourth letter was written by M. M. Crocker, who had been of the firm of Finch and Crocker, which it is claimed contains an admission of the defendant’s liability in the following words, to-wit: “1 have not forgotten that you will look to us for the payment of your claim.”
It is not pretended that this fourth letter contains in itself any written assumption or promise to pay Parker’s debts, but that the foregoing remark is an admission that such a
Affirmed.