27 Barb. 82 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1858
Upon the finding of the judge who tried this cause, which was well warranted by the evidence, it must be assumed that Quimby, who was indebted to the plaintiff, to Bliss, and to the men in his own employ, delivered the grain in question, of which he was owner, to the defendants, upon their engagement to pay Bliss, to pay the employees, and out of the proceeds of the grain to pay the plaintiff. So far as Bliss and the boatmen were concerned,
In Van Epps v. McGill, (Lalor’s Sup. to Hill & Denio, 209,) it was held that a mere verbal agreement between the plaintiff, the defendant and a third person, that a debt owing by the latter to the plaintiff, should be paid by the defendant to the plaintiff on account of a debt of a similar amount owing by the defendant to such third person, was a mere nudum, pactum, and not obligatory upon the parties, unless some new consideration was introduced into the transaction; and that the antecedent indebtedness not being extinguished or in any way affected by the new arrangement, di'd not furnish sufficient aliment for its support.
In Blunt v. Boyd, (3 Barb. 209,) it was also held, against the dissenting opinion of Mr. Justice Harris, that a pre-existing debt, owing by the defendant to one Bowley, was not a sufficient consideration for a promise, made by the defendant, to pay Bowley’s indebtedness of a similar amount to the plaintiff; that some new element must enter into the transfer of the indebtedness, in order to give it vitality; but that it would have been sufficient, if, at the time, the defendant had actually paid to Bowley the amount of the debt owing by him-to Bowley, and the latter had immediately re-delivered money to the defendant, upon his engagement to pay
In Barker v. Bucklin, (2 Denio, 45,) it was held that a purchase, by the defendant, of a span of horses, from a third person, and a promise by the defendant, in consideration thereof, to pay the whole or a part of the purchase money to the plaintiff, in consideration that the plaintiff would forbear to prosecute such third person upon a debt owing by him, until such purchase money became due, was a valid transaction, and legally bound the defendant to the performance of his engagement to the plaintiff, and enabled the latter to institute a suit thereon in his own name.
In Farley v. Cleveland, (4 Cowen, 432,) although the case was decided at a previous date, the court went a step further, and held that independent of the question of forbearance, and of the continuance of the original indebtedness, a promise by the defendant to pay to the plaintiff the amount which the defendant owed to a third person on a purchase then made, in satisfaction of a debt of like amount previously owing by such third person to the plaintiff, was a valid promise, and would support an action in the plaintiff’s own name. It was put upon the ground that it was not a promise to pay the debt of another, and so void by the statute of frauds, if by parol; but that it was a promise to pay the defendant's own debt, in a particular way, satisfactory to his creditor.
In Delaware and Hudson Canal Co. v. The Westchester Co. Bank, (4 Denio, 97,) which arose upon demurrer, the court went still further, and held, in general terms, that as a general rule, where one party promises another to pay to him the former’s debt to a third person, in satisfaction of the debt of such third person to the plaintiff, the promise is binding, and enables the promisee to maintain a suit thereon in his own name. This doctrine is, I think, rather too broadly stated, and is subject to some qualifications.
If the foregoing views are correct, it was tint essential to the maintenance of this action that Quimby should have as*signed the cause of action to the plaintiff. He was examined as a witness, and properly so, independent of the assignment, altogether. He was neither a party to the suit, nor the party for whose immediate benefit it was prosecuted. Nor was he examined as assignor, but was just as competent a witness, as to every fact to which he testified, without as with the assignment. The fact that he had made an assignment of the demand, seems to have been given in evidence, although the written assignment itself was excluded. It is supposed that this entitled the defendant to be examined as a witness in his own behalf; especially if the written assignment was erroneously excluded. But I do not see that this is so. Had the assignment even been introduced in evidence, as it was offered to be on the part of the defendant, it would not have helped the defendant’s counsel towards examining his client. This trial was before the late amendment allowing parties to be sworn in their own behalf, and the only ground on which the defendant could ask to be sworn, was that the assignor had been sworn against him. But I think, to entitle him to that privilege, the assignment must be one that passes the cause of action—-an effective assignment, without which the suit would have to be brought in the name of the assignor. A third person not interested in the cause of action, might have undertaken to assign it, and might have executed a formal instrument to that effect; and such third person might have been called as a witness by the plaintiff. If he was so, I do not consider that the defendant would be thereby entitled to examine himself. And the reason is, that although such third person was the nominal, he was not the real assignor. He did not in fact, any more than Quimby did in this case, assign the real cause of action. In a certain
The defendant, however, contends that he was entitled to evidence of the written paper, for the purpose of shaking or impeaching the evidence of Quimby ; and although it is not perceived that, properly explained, it would have that effect to any material extent, yet perhaps it would be proper evidence for the consideration of the jury, as bearing upon the credibility of Quimby, and as tending to show that a demand which by his testimony was shown to be vested in the plaintiff, on the 14th of September, was disposed of by assignment by him as owner thereof, on the 26th of September, were it not for the circumstance that the fact of assignment, and the date of the assignment, appear to have been in the case already. I had some doubt, on my first examination of the case, whether these facts were really proved, and whether the plaintiff's objections, which were sustained by the court, did not go to the entire exclusion of any evidence on that subject : but on a closer inspection of the case, 1 think they were limited to the contents of the instrument. It is not to be presumed that the contents of the paper (which are not shown) would have disclosed any material fact bearing on Quimby’s credibility, beyond what had thus already sufficiently appeared in the oral evidence; and the defendants had there
Wright, Gould and Hogeboom, Justices.]
On the whole, I cannot see that any error was committed, and am therefore of opinion that the judgment of the court below should be affirmed. .