Opinion by
The facts in this case raise a question under the statute of frauds and perjuries (sec. 1, Act of April 26, 1855, P. L. 308): “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.”
While there are, in the record, four assignments of error, they only raise one question, to wit: the sufficiency of the plaintiff’s testimony to take the alleged promise of the defendant out of the statute of frauds and perjuries. We will discuss this question, first, under the plaintiff’s own version of the promise as disclosed by his own testimony. And second, is his testimony relied upon so clear, precise and indubitable as to take the case out of the statute by proving such a change of relation as to make what was originally the debt of Norris, that of the defendant, as an original undertaking and not as a collateral promise to pay the debt of Norris, if he did not pay it?
On October 26, 1907, the defendant entered into a contract with I. M. Norris to construct a dwelling house for him in the borough of Huntingdon. Norris began work on October 28, 1907, and on December 26 following, he was sold out by the sheriff. The plaintiff had a verbal contract with Norris to furnish the lumber for the house, and a considerable portion of the lumber had been furnished prior to the sale and the residue was furnished thereafter. All of this lumber was charged to Norris, and the bill or statement thereof, dated November 9, 1907, was made out by plaintiff against Norris and not against the defendant. There is not a particle of evidence that Norris was ever released from his liability to
The plaintiff clearly testified that he made his contract to furnish the lumber in question with Mr. Norris about October 28, 1907; that the contract was verbal and it embraced what lumber it took for defendant’s house. When asked to give the exact language used by the defendant in making the promise relied upon in this suit, the plaintiff testified: “Mr. Jackson said, I shall see that not one man shall lose a penny for material that goes into my building. You go ahead and put in the lumber and everything will be all right. I will see that you will be paid.” Again he testified: “ Q. Now what did Mr. Jackson say to you? A. He said exactly this:
Now in reply to this testimony the defendant absolutely denied making any such promise to plaintiff. What he claimed to have promised was to undertake to get Norris to permit him to apply money which he might thereafter owe Norris to the payment of the plaintiff’s lumber bill, and his testimony is uncontradicted that he did pay the balance he owed Norris to the plaintiff, to wit, $57.74, and that by reason of the death of Norris his contract was not completed and the defendant was not indebted to him or his estate thereafter.
The learned court below in what is called a decree, in the appellant’s paper-book, cites and relies on several cases to justify submitting the case to the jury. But these cases have no bearing on the question, unless the evidence had shown that the defendant was indebted to Norris or had in his hands a fund in some manner furnished by Norris out of which the plaintiff’s claim was to be paid by the defendant.
The cases cited by the court, which we say have no bearing on the present question, are Adams v. Kuehn, 119 Pa. 76; Delp v. Brewing Co., 123 Pa. 42; Sargent v. Johns, 206 Pa. 386. The latter case is not in point because as appears in Mr. Justice Mitchell’s opinion: “ No question of the statute of frauds arises, for by the taking of the entire stock a consideration passed to defendants’ and Alleman’s creditors, though not parties to the contract, were parties to the consideration within the principles of Delp v. Bartholomay Brewing Co., 123 Pa. 42, and Adams v. Kuehn, 119 Pa. 76. Plaintiffs, therefore, as such creditors were entitled to sue in their own names if their claims were in fact within the consideration, or on the principle of estoppel if they were led to believe so, and to act upon such belief to their prejudice in reliance on a notice authorized or adopted by defendants.”
So we say as to the present case. The plaintiff testified that he made a contract with Norris to furnish all of the lumber for the defendant’s house and he furnished it and charged it to Norris and made his bill or statement of account against Norris, and the defendant only paid thereon the amount he owed Norris, after the latter had marked the bill O. K. The debt was the debt of Norris, and the undertaking of the defendant, as stated by the plaintiff himself, was to see that plaintiff’s claim against Norris would be paid. If this was not
Our second proposition is that the testimony of the plaintiff is not so clear, precise and indubitable as to warrant the court in permitting a jury to find that the defendant was liable on a new and original undertaking to pay for the lumber in question. The plaintiff in his testimony falls short of such clear and precise testimony as the authorities require. In our opinion, taking his testimony and that of the defendant, and the writings in evidence, including the bill of lumber and the letter of the defendant of January 4, 1908, the only reasonable interpretation of the evidence is that the parties, at the time of the conversations testified to, only contemplated that the defendant would endeavor to pay the plaintiff for the lumber out of such sums of money as he might owe Norris in cáse he completed the house in accordance with the contract. But if we are wrong in this view, on no theory of the evidence can we find that the defendant undertook to do more than to pay the plaintiff for the lumber, in case Norris made default in such payment, and this oral promise, as we have seen, is void under the statute.
At the trial the learned court below overruled a point asking for a binding instruction in favor of the defendant and granted an exception and sealed a bill (fourth assignment). We sustain this assignment. Judgment reversed.