191 Mass. 469 | Mass. | 1906
This is an action to recover $1,119.96, with interest thereon, for money paid by the plaintiffs by reason of having signed as sureties at the request of the defendant a bond given in January, 1896, by Thomas F. Hill, as principal, to one Charles H. Hanson.
The plaintiffs’ evidence tended to show that in the year 1895 one Thomas F. Hill and one Charles H. Hanson were partners in Lowell as retail liquor dealers and innholders; that in January, 1896, Hanson withdrew from the business and Hill con-
The plaintiffs offered in evidence the original papers and the docket record in the action on the bond in question of Hanson against Hill and the plaintiffs herein, brought in December, 1897, in which judgment was entered for the plaintiff Hanson on December S, 1900, for $1,015.57 and costs. On December 17, 1900, the plaintiffs paid the amount of the judgment on the bond, which with costs amounted to $1,119.96.
There was also evidence that after the bringing of the action of Hanson against Hill and the plaintiffs, the plaintiffs notified the defendant of the pendency of the action, and the defendant advised the plaintiffs what counsel to employ* but did not himself defend; and that in executing the bond the plaintiffs relied entirely upon the promise of the defendant, and not at all upon the responsibility of Hill, the principal in the bond; that Hill was a man of no property whatsoever, except his interest hr the liquor business.
The defendant’s evidence tended to show that Hanson never, after the execution and delivery of the bond, except as above set forth, paid any debt or demand existing against the firm of Hanson and Hill mentioned in the bond; that it was agreed by Hanson and Hill in December, 1895, to refer the adjustment of their partnership accounts and all matters connected therewith to the police board of Lowell, Massachusetts, and to give that board full power to adjust all matters and accounts existing between them as partners, and all accounts due from them as partners to third persons, and that they agreed to accept such adjustment as
It further appeared that the bond was made on January 13, 1896; that the money due from Hanson and Hill to the defendant mentioned above was advanced by the defendant for the payment of the indebtedness of Hanson and Hill some time in February, 1896, and that some of the creditors of Hanson and Hill were paid in February, 1896.
It appeared that Hanson and his brother brought an action on June 3, 1896, against the defendant to recover the sum of §1,582.72, and that in November, 1897, judgment in that action was entered, by agreement of the parties, in favor of the defendant, whose answer in the action was that the alleged claim had been paid by set-off in the manner above stated.
There was no evidence that the plaintiffs ever made any effort to collect from the principal in the bond in question the amount paid by them thereon, or that any demand therefor was ever made on the principal.
The defendant requested the judge to rule as follows:
“ 1. That the execution of the bond in question by Hill as principal, and the plaintiffs as sureties, made Hill primarily liable to the sureties for any damage they might sustain by rea*472 son of signing of the bond; and this defendant’s alleged promise of indemnity, if made, was merely collateral and so within the statute of frauds, and this defendant is not liable thereon.
“2. If the plaintiff signed the bond in question relying in part upon the responsibility of Hill, the principal in the bond, and in part on the alleged oral promise of indemnity by the defendant, the defendant’s alleged promise, if he made it, was collateral and within the statute of frauds, and the defendant is not liable thereon.”
The judge refused to give these instructions.
The case was submitted to the jury under appropriate instructions, to which no exceptions were taken. The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiffs for the full amount claimed.
The only questions of law argued by the defendant are to the refusal to give the instructions requested.
1. The first instruction requested could not have been given. The defendant’s promise to the plaintiffs was not “ a special promise to answer for the debt, default or misdoings of another ” within the statute of frauds, R. L. c. 74, § 1, cl. 2, but was an original promise to save the sureties harmless from all loss on account of their signing as sureties, if the jury believed the testimony of the plaintiffs. This question was submitted to the jury with appropriate instructions. Colt v. Root, 17 Mass. 229. Weld v. Nichols, 17 Pick. 538. Chapin v. Lapham, 20 Pick. 467. Preble v. Baldwin, 6 Cush. 549. Aldrich v. Ames, 9 Gray, 76. Perkins v. Littlefield, 5 Allen, 370. Collins v. Pratt, 181 Mass. 345, 347.
2. There was no evidence in the case to serve as a foundation •for the second request. The evidence for the plaintiffs is that in executing the bond the plaintiffs relied entirely upon the promise of the defendant, and not at all upon the responsibility of Hill; that Hill was a man of no property whatsoever, except his interest in the liquor business. There was no evidence to contradict this. • •
Other questions which arose at the trial are disposed of by the verdict.
Exceptions overruled.