80 N.Y. 269 | NY | 1880
We must assume here the most favorable construction which the evidence will bear for the plaintiff, as all conflict and doubt has been settled in his favor by the jury. We may assume, then, as the effect of the evidence (although it is not very satisfactory), that the defendant, in borrowing the money of the plaintiff and disposing of the Marsh note to him, was ostensibly acting for himself, and not as agent for Marsh, and that he promised that the note was good, and would be paid at maturity. The defendant claims that *271
this promise, not in writing, is void under the statute of frauds. The reasoning to take this promise out of the statute is quite subtle, and I should have much difficulty in yielding it my assent, but for the authorities which I think ought now to control. The following are some of them: (Fowler v.Clearwater, 35 Barb., 143; Dauber v. Blackney, 38 id., 432;Lossee v. Williams, 6 Lans, 228; Johnson v. Gilbert, 4 Hill, 178; Brown v. Curtiss,
Here the money was delivered to the defendant for his own benefit, and the Marsh note was delivered to and received by the plaintiff as a mode of paying the plaintiff for the money thus had. The defendant's promise may be regarded, in effect, not as a collateral promise to answer for the default of Marsh, but as a promise to pay the plaintiff for the money he had had, in case Marsh did not pay him, like the promise of one to pay his own debt, in case a third person did not pay it. Within the principles laid down in the authorities above cited, such a promise is not within the statute.
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
All concur, except RAPALLO, J., absent.
Judgment affirmed. *273