40 Kan. 361 | Kan. | 1888
Lead Opinion
The opinion of the court was delivered by
It is admitted that the controlling question involved in this case is as follows:
“A.B. buys property from plaintiff and gives three notes in payment; two notes remain unpaid. S.B. buys and receives the property from A. B., and verbally only promises and assumes the payment of the notes sued on; these not being paid, action thereon is prosecuted to judgment against both A.B. and S.B., before a justice, and S.B. appeals. Can the action be maintained against S. B., the judgment against A. B. still standing unreversed and unsatisfied? In other words, can both the maker and he who bought the property of him, and verbally promised to pay the notes, be sued at the same time ? ”
The district court answered the foregoing question or questions in the negative, and rendered judgment in favor of the defendant Stephen Burrows, and against the plaintiff, the Plano Manufacturing Company; and to reverse this judg
The principal facts of this case, stated briefly, are as follows: The plaintiff sold a twine-binder harvester to Aaron Burrows, who gave to the plaintiff his promissory notes therefor. Aaron Burrows afterward sold the harvester to his brother, Stephen Barrows, who in consideration therefor orally promised Aaron to assume the payment of the notes. Two of the notes were not paid, and the plaintiff commenced this action before a justice of the peace against both Aaron and Stephen, setting forth the foregoing facts as his cause or causes of action, and obtained judgment against both for $166; and Stephen appealed to the district court, with the result aforesaid.
We are inclined to think that the court below erred. In this state it is enacted by statute, (Civil Code, § 26,) and settled by numerous decisions, that all actions, with a few particular exceptions which have no application to this case, must be prosecuted in the name of the real party in interest, and therefore whenever a contract is made between two persons for the ^benefit of a third, the third person, though not one of the contracting parties, is the proper person to commence
In the present case, Stephen Burrows, in consideration for the harvester which he purchased from Aaron Burrows, promised Aaron that he would pay the purchase-price agreed upon between the two to the Plano Manufacturing Company in liquidation and payment of the notes due from Aaron Burrows to the company. Under this contract the company, and not Aaron Burrows, was to receive the purchase-money, and
We think the plaintiff’s‘action may be maintained, and the judgment of the court below will be reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.
Dissenting Opinion
Dissenting to third and fourth points of syllabus, and to those portions of the opinion sustaining the law as therein declared.