4 Cow. 432 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1825
Curia, per
That part of the statute which relates to this case, is as follows : “No action shall be brought whereby to charge the defendant upon any special promise to answer for the debt, default or miscarriages of another person, unless the agreement upon which such action shall be brought, or some memorandum or note thereof, shall be in writing,” &c. Our statute is a transcript of the 29 Ch. 2. The English decisions, therefore, upon that statute, are entitled to consideration. We have been referred to several, before noticing which, the three classes of cases mentioned by Kent, Ch. J. in Leonard v. Vredenburgh, (8 John. Rep. 29,) should be attended to. These are, 1. Where the promise of the defendant is collateral to the principal promise, but made at the same time; 2, Where the collateral promise was subsequent to the original indebtedness, and was made upon no other consideration but the liability of the original debtor; 3. Where the promise arises out of some new consideration of benefit or harm, moving between the newly contracting parties, or, as expressed by Mr. Roberts, (Rob. on Frauds, 232,) “ If it spring out of any new transaction, or move to the party promising upon some fresh and substantive ground of a personal concern to himself.” The first class needs no other consideration than the original debt to which it is collateral; the second does ; and the third is not within the statute at all. In the two first cases the considerativa must be in writing, as well as the promise; in the third, all may rest in parol, as in ordinary cases.
Buckmyr v. Darnall, (2 Ld. Raym. 1085,) belongs to the first class. The defendant had promised the plaintiff to return his horse, if he would let him to one English, to ride to Reading. This was held to be collateral, because English was liable on the original bailment; and hence it must be
In this Court, the case of Leonard v. Vredenburgh, as decided, belongs to the third class. The defendant promised in writing to guaranty a note of one M. Johnson, for $500, on which the guaranty was written.
The case of Fish v. Hutchinson, (2 Wils. 94,) belongs to the second class. The plaintiff had sued one Vickars, and the defendant in consideration that the plaintiff would stay his action, promised to pay him the money owing to him by Vickars. The Court decided this promise to be within the statute, as the original debt was still subsisting. So also in the case of Jackson v. Rayner, in this Court, (12 John. 291,) the defendant in the Court below, promised the plaintiff below, (who had sued the defendant’s son,) that he, the defendant, would pay the debt, as he had taken his son’s property, and meant to pay his honest debts. The Court decided, that a promise in writing was necessary; and emphasize the fact, that the oríginal debt of the son was still subsisting. This case was decided on the authority of Simpson v. Patten, (4 John. Rep. 222,) which will be hereafter noticed.
The third class, mentioned by Kent, Ch. J. as not within the statute, has been illustrated by the following cases: In Read v. Nash, (1 Wils. 305,) one Tuack, the plaintiff’s testator, had sued one Johnson for an assault and battery, and the cause being at issue, the defendant promised, that, if Tuack would withdraw the record, he would pay him £50 and the costs. This was held an original promise, and that here was no debt, default or miscarriage. In Williams v. Leper, (3 Burr. 1886,) the plaintiff was proceeding to distrain
These cases do not entirely agree, unless they are distinguishable by the circumstance that in some of them forbearance to sue the original debtor is the whole, or a principal part of the consideration for the promise ; and in the others, the whole consideration is something new, moving to the party making- the promise. Thus, in Simpson v. Patten and Jackson v. Rayner, the promise was founded, as well upon the forbearance of the plaintiffs to sue the original debt- or, as upon property of the debtor being placed in the hands
The case under consideration is, in principle, very much like the case of Gold v. Philips. The defendant had, in that case, purchased land of the original debtor, which was the consideration moving to the defendant-. In this the defendant purchased hay, which was the consideration moving to him. So, too, in Olmsted v. Greenly, the original debtor placed money and goods in the defendant’s hands, with which he promised to make certain payments, and to pay the plaintiff’s debt. It was averred that this was done by the procurement of the plaintiff, which is the only difference between that case and this, if the hay was not absolutely sold by Moon to the defendant. In all these cases, founded upon anew and original consideration of benefit to the defendant, or harm to the plaintiff, moving to the party making the promise, either from the plaintiff or the original debtor, the subsisting liability of the original debtor is no objection to the, recovery.
I am, therefore, of opinion that the Court below erred; that the judgment be reversed^ and a venire de novo awarded.
Judgment reversed.