68 W. Va. 462 | W. Va. | 1910
Alleged error in the rulings of the trial court on a demurrer 'to evidence constitutes the ground of complaint on this writ. The Hurst Hardware Company instituted the action to recover a sum due it for merchandise sold and delivered to a corporation, known as the Goodman Coal & Coke Company, amounting to $900.85, and also a sum due it, as assignee of the Williamson Grocery Company, for goods sold and delivered to the-same corporation; on the theory that the defendant, A. Goodman, had bound himself by verbal promises to pay said debts, not within the statute of frauds.
The facts disclosed by the uncontradicted testimony are substantially as follows: The defendánt and one Sampsell took a coal lease on a tract of land known as the Stepp land, providing for the payment of a heavy minimum annual royalty. ' The Goodman Coal & Coke Co. was organized to develop the property and
If the situation of the defendant as an officer and stockholder of the corporation, endorser on its paper, and principal in the obligation- for royalties, payment whereof was assumed by the corporation, did not make these debts for goods his own debts, founded^upon consideration moving to him, and the promises original, the judgment is right. By charging the goods to the corporation and demanding payment thereof from it, the vendors disclosed manifest, positive and unequivocal intent to hold it a debtor to them. In seeking now to hold Goodman also, they are attempting to make him pay the acknowledged debt of the corporation. In such cases, the decisive test is to whom credit
The decision must turn, therefore, upon the inquiry as to the effect of the relation existing between Goodman and the Goodman Coal & Coke Co. If, in substance, effect and main purpose, the oral agreements were for his benefit, the promises were original and not collateral undertakings. It is not enough merely to say he was benefited by them. In ordinary contract law, a benefit to the prisoner or detriment to the promisee constitutes a sufficient consideration. The question we are called upon to determine goes beyond this. How far the policy which dictated the statute of frauds, and the terms in which the legislative will is expresed, must have weight in the solution thereof. In almost every instance of the assumption of one man’s debt by another, there is some reason for the promise, some benefit accruing to the promisor as well as the debtor. The acknowledged and expressly declared purpose of the statute is to preclude the establishment of rights by oral testimony, when the situation of the parties is such as to constitute a strong motive for perjury and fraud in establishing a liability, or the false extension or amplification of conversations and transactions so as to make them impose obligations lying beyond their real scope and effect. To this end, it ordains and declares that no action shall lie to charge any person upon a promise to answer for the debt, default or misdoings of another, unless the promise or some memorandum or note thereof be in writing signed by the party to be charged thereby or his agent. Tested by its letter, the statute inhibits proof of an oral promise to pay the debt of a third person. That some benefits accrues to the promisor for the Service rendered, or the property sold and delivered, to such third person, does not necessarily make the debt that of the promisor or prevent it from being that of such third
This question has been the subject of much discussion and sómewhat varied judicial rulings. A divergence of opinion, respecting it, between Chief Justice Shaw, of Massachusetts, and Chancellor Kent, of New York, became manifest many years ago. In some states, the views of,one are adopted and in some the views of the other. New York has receded from the position taken by Chancellor Kent and substantially adopted that of the Massachusetts court. In Leonard v. Vredenburgh,. 8 Johns. 29, Chancellor Kent took the position that a promise to pay the debt of another, arising out of some new and original consideration of benefit or harm moving between the newly contracting parties, is not within the statute. As this practically eliminated all promises founded upon a consideration, sufficient under the rules of common law, it relieved from the operation of the statute a vast number of promises, such in character as to bring them clearly within the policy which dictated the enactment of the statute. For this reason, the New York court of appeals has limited it very greatly. It now holds that mere detriment to the promisee is not enough to take a promise out of the statute. Mallory v. Gillett, 21 N. Y. 412. In that case, it was held that the new consideration must move to the promisor and be beneficial to him. In Brown v. Weber, 38 N. Y. 187, it was observed that this did not sufficiently limit the exception from the statute, for the reason that a promise, made upon a new consideration, moving to the promisor and beneficial to him, may still be only collateral or conditional and therefore within the statute. Accordingly the court said: “The test to be applied to every case is, whether the party sought to be charged is the prin
In this case, the goods the -defendant promised to pay for contributed to the development of the company’s mine and kept it a going concern for the time being. Defendant had no lien upon the property or assets of the company nor any contract with it by virtue of which the delivery to it of the goods, constituting consideration of the debts, could enure to his direct, immediate and personal advantage. The benefit accrued directly to the corporation and no one else. Incidentally and remotely, the defendant and all other stockholders and creditors may be said to have been benefited, but not otherwise. We do not think this sufficient to bring the case within the rules and principles upon which promises of this kind are held to be original in consequence of benefit accruing to the promisor.
Seeing no error in the judgment, we affirm it.
Affirmed.