33 N.C. 298 | N.C. | 1850
This was assumpsit upon a promise to pay $100 as the price of a tract of land. The plaintiff proved that he sold to the defendant a tract of land, and executed to him a bond for title, to be made when the purchase money was paid; (299) whereupon, as the price of the land, the defendant promised to pay $100 to certain persons to whom the plaintiff was indebted. The defendant relied on the statute of frauds, Rev. St., ch. 50, secs. 10 and 8. Section 10 provides that "no action shall be brought to charge the defendant upon any special promise to answer the debt, default or miscarriage of another person, unless the agreement or some memorandum or note thereof be in writing."
The case does not fall under the operation of this section, for the promise is to pay the debt, not of another person, but of the *219 very person to whom the promise is made, and it is well settled that such a promise does not fall within the operation of this section of the statute.
Section 8 provides that all contracts to sell or convey lands and slaves shall be void, unless such contract or some memorandum or note thereof be put in writing and signed by the party to be charged therewith, etc. The contract, in this case, was for the sale of land. The defendant signed no memorandum or note in writing whereby he can be charged, and we are at a loss to see any ground, at all plausible, to support an action against him upon a mere verbal promise. Lathrop v. Bryant, 2 Bing., N.C. 744. The defendant had signed a written contract to convey land. The plaintiff (like the defendant in this case) had only made a verbal promise to pay the price, and it was urged for the defendant that he ought not to be liable under his written promise, inasmuch as the plaintiff was not bound by his verbal promise; but, said the Chief Justice, "whose fault was that? The defendant might have required the plaintiff's signature. The object of the statute was to secure the defendant. In the argument a little confusion has grown out of the fact of not distinguishing between the consideration of an agreement and the mutuality of claim. The defendant, for a sufficient consideration, has bound himself in writing; whether the (300) plaintiff is bound or not is not now the subject of inquiry." In this case the construction of the statute was fully discussed. It is taken for granted, and as a thing not debatable, that the party who did not sign the memorandum or note in writing was not liable, and the idea of his being liable is not even suggested. In Miller v. Irwin,
PER CURIAM. Judgment reversed, and venire de novo.
Cited: Wade v. New Bern,
(301)