Opinion by
The City of Philadelphia sued to recover $9,076.46 from four defendants, Rosin’s Parking Lots, Inc., and three individuals, Charles Rosin, David Rosin and Henry Rosin.
By ordinance 1 of July 21, 1937, the City imposed an excise tax of 10% of gross receipts from automobile parking on open parking lots. The ordinance provided for reports to the Department of Public Works, Bureau of Highways, by the operators of such lots and for the payment and collection of the taxes, with interest and specified penalties for default. Section 4 provided: “All such taxes shall be recoverable by the City Solicitor as other debts of like amount are now by law recoverable.”
The complaint avers that prior to December 31,1938, the individual defendants operated parking lots “individually and later as Rosin Brothers” and filed returns under the ordinance; that on or about December 31, 1938, the individual defendants “organized” “Rosin’s Parking Lots, Inc.” which operated the parking lots and filed returns. These returns should show the amount of *176 taxes admitted to be owing from time to time by' the respective parties. The complaint ■ avers that' “On or about the 31st day of May, 1941 2 an oral agreement was entered into by and between the said three individual defendants, on behalf of themselves and the corporation, and Abraham L. Shapiro and Abraham Wernick, Assistant City Solicitors, that if the City of Philadelphia would withhold any legal proceedings for the collection of the entire indebtedness due from all the individual defendants and the said corporate defendant and take no steps to terminate the permit for the operation of the said parking lots, the said individual defendants, on behalf of themselves and on behalf of the corporate defendant, would pay the entire indebtedness of $9,464.58, due from all the defendants at that time, in the following manner: .
“$138.12 at .that time; and the balance of $9,326.46 in monthly payments of $125.00, until the entire indebtedness is paid in full.”
The .City avers that the specified sum of $138.12 was paid and that a receipt acknowledging: the payment and setting forth .the terms of the agreement pursuant to which the payment was made, was executed by the Receiver of Taxes and delivered to and accepted by the defendants. It is also averred that on October 15, 1941, the sum of $250.00 was paid and a similar receipt was issued by the Receiver of Taxes. Copies of both papers are made part of the complaint. This suit is for the balance unpaid with interest and penalties.
Preliminary objections to the complaint were filed by the individual defendants. The case was. heard on the objections and the court made the following order: “Defendants’ preliminary objections 3(a) and 3(b) are sustained. The complaint is dismissed as to the individual defendants.” The city appeals from that order.
*177 Tbe objections sustained were tbns stated by.defendants: “3. Tbe alleged oral agreement made by tbe defendants with Abrabam Wernick and Abrabam L. Shapiro, assistant city solicitors, is not a valid contract binding either the City or tbe defendants in that.
“ (a) There was lack of consideration in that tbe City was not bound by tbe promise to withhold legal proceedings.
“(b) Tbe city was not a party to the agreement.”
Tbe learned court held-, as we understand the opinion filed in support of .its order, that .the assistant city solicitors bad no authority to make tbe agreement.
Tbe city contends that as tbe ordinance directed tbe taxes to be recoverable “by tbe City Solicitor as other debts of like amount are now by law recoverable” and as attached to and made part of the complaint were tbe two receipts issued by the Receiver of Taxes, one of which stated the substance of. the oral agreement, tbe right to recovery alleged in tbe complaint was something more than'a mere averment of a contract made by tbe assistant city solicitors, and, on tbe contrary, constituted a contract enforcible by tbe city against tbe defendants. . ■
Defendants’ argument is. they are not bound by the agreement because the City ..is not bound.: :
It may be conceded for present purposes that tbe agreement was illegal, but tbe lack of power to give time to these defendants for tbe .payment of these taxes, is not a legal justification of their refusal to pay and therefore is not ground for demurrer. Their promise to pay was for the benefit of all the taxpayers of the city, not for the accommodation "of the assistant city solicitor or the receiver of taxes. The case is not within the general rule prohibiting recovery for breach of an illegal, contract as in
Kuhn v.
Buhl,
*179
Another matter should be mentioned. The complaint is not a model pleading. From what was stated at the oral argument and appears on page 7 of appellant’s brief, we understand the transactions involved additional facts not alleged in the complaint. The Statute of Frauds provides that “No action shall be brought whereby ... to charge the defendant, upon any special promise, to answer for the debt or default of another, unless the agreement upon which such action shall be brought, or some memorandum or note thereof, shall be in writing, and signed by the party to be charged therewith, or some other person by him authorized.” Act of April 26, 1855, P. L. 308, 33 P. S. 3. It has been held that a writing is not. necessary and that the case is not within the statute when the principal object of the promissor is to advantage himself, instead of another: see
Nugent v. Wolfe,
The fact that the agreement of the individual defendants was oral is therefore not enough to sustain judgment for them. If it appears that they made this agreement to save themselves from judgment and execution in the circumstances referred to in the brief, it may be an original undertaking. The plaintiff should have leave to amend.
Order reversed. Leave is granted to the plaintiff to amend the complaint within 30 days after the return of the record.
Notes
City Ordinances for 1937, p. 391. The Ordinance was considered in
Philadelphia v. Samuels,
Another averment (paragraph 5) and Exhibit A show that this date was erroneously .stated for April 17, 1941; for the purposes of the decision this error is immaterial.
The bank cases are explained in Williston, Contracts, section 1632, as follows: “Thus, for the security of depositors and others, banks are prohibited from entering into certain kinds of loans or purchases. When a transaction of this sort has been entered into, however, should the corporation be refused a right of recovery the result would be the impairment of the assets of the bank — the very result which the law seeks to prevent, and, therefore, the bank is allowed to recover. And since it is a sufficient mark of illegality for a transaction to have a strong tendency to violate public policy even though its actual performance has had no harmful effects so far as *179 executed: ‘Public policy requires that a person who for the accommodation of the. bank executes an instrument which is in form a binding obligation, should be estopped from thereafter asserting that simultaneously the parties agreed that the instrument should not be enforced.’ ”
