The opinion of the Court was delivered by
This was an action of covenant, in which the plaintiff below declared on the following deed :—“ Whereas, Ber
The plaintiff below having given this deed in evidence, and the four notes referred to, executed by Bernard O’Conner and Bernard M’Gonigle to Masterson, O’Conner, Keennan and Brad)7, and proved that after actions brought on the notes, by the records, he had paid the judgments on the notes to the attorneys of the respective plaintiffs, as well as notice to Bernard Flinn to defend the suits and the insolvency of Bernard O’Conner his principal, rested.
The defendant then proved by the payees of the four notes that they never accepted of Flinn as surety in the place of M’Goni-gle, and that they had no part in that agreement. It was admitted no money passed between the parties at the time the covenant was executed, nor any other property.
The plaintiff, to repel this evidence, offered to prove by George Bomberger, the subscribing witness to Flinn’s engagement, and others, that at the time of executing the contract there was another executed immediately at and preceding between O’Conner and Flinn which was lost. To prove the loss and the contents, and to show that it was an agreement between Flinn and O’Conner, by which Flinn became an equal partner with O’Conner in a contract which the latter held on the New York and Erie railroad, and for the purchase of which the four notes were given by Bernard O’Conner, the contract having been originally held by Bernard O’Conner, Bernard Flinn, John Masterson, Patrick O’Conner, Francis Keennan and Patrick Brady, all of whose interests had been purchased by O’Conner, and the notes for $400 given to each of the vendors, four of which are those already given in evidence, and for which M’Gonigle was surety for O’Conner. That it was left with the witness, and endorsed upon the first contract, and to prove what that contract was. The plaintiff having proved the execution, and that the paper was lost at the trial before the arbitrators, offered evidence and proved its contents; and this forms the first error for our consideration.
The rules which prevail on this branch of the law of evidence are well settled. If the instrument is lost, the party is required to give some evidence that such a paper once existed, though slight evidence is sufficient for this purpose; and that a bond fide
When a bond is made to A, to pay him or a third person a sum of money for the benefit of the latter, the action must be brought in the name of A. 1 Chit. Plead. 4. When a deed is made inter partes, (that is, between A of the first part and B of the second part), C, a stranger, cannot sue on a covenant therein, though made for his benefit. 1 Chit. 4. It must appear that the covenant which is alleged to have been broken was made for the benefit of the person bringing the action. 4 Wend. 119. Here the covenant
Judgment affirmed.
