| N.Y. Sup. Ct. | May 15, 1836

*183 By the court

Savage Ch. J.

Ever since the case of Sears v. Brink, 3 Johns. R. 210,it has been uniformly held, in this court that to take a case out of the statute of frauds, not only the promise, but the consideration for the promise, must be in writing. In Rogers v. Kneeland, 10 Wendell, 250, it was held that, under the old statute, it was not necessary that the consideration should appear upon the face of the instrument containing the promise—that it was sufficient, if fairly implied. In this case it is admitted, by the demurrer, that the consideration does not appear upon the face of the written promise. It is said the consideration was forbearance. If forbearance was the consideration, to what time did it extend ? This is not like some of the English cases, where the promise was to pay by a particular time; there it was inferred that forbearance to that time was the consideration. Here the defendant engages that Torrey will eventually pay. This is an undertaking for the ultimate payment by the maker; no time is specified. If the consideration was forbearance, it may be said to be for the life of the maker, as well as for any other time. When this guaranty was, given, the note had been due more than a year ; and it seems the plaintiff had forborne so long, for it is not alleged that any suit was pending. It seems to me, that to say that forbearance was the consideration appearing in writing in the transactions between these parties, would be going farther to infer a consideration than the circumstances would justify ; it may have been any thing else with equal probability. I cannot consent to depart from the case of Sears v. Brink, and indulge in conjecture, at a period when the revised statutes have adopted Sears v. Brink, by declaring that the consideration shall be expressed in the agreement itself—not in any other accompanying writing; and we are justified in considering the revised statutes as declaratory of what was the true understanding of the old statute. Forbearance has never been considered a new consideration, passing between the newly contracting parties, so as to take the case out of the statute and make the promise an original one.

The fourth and fifth pleas are good. The second plea is frivolous, and for that cause bad.

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