77 Mo. App. 318 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1898
This action is based on a promise alleged to have been made by defendants to D. H. Manard for the benefit of plaintiffs. Defendants demurred to the evidence for plaintiffs. The demurrer was overruled. Defendants did not offer testimony. The judgment in the trial court was rendered against Barger, one of the defendants.
It seems that defendants were conducting a private bank and that Manard owed them several thousand dollars which he could neither pay nor secure. Plaintiffs claim that it was then agreed, between defendants and Manard, that the latter, who was a dealer in live stock, should continue to purchase stock for sale and that they would pay the checks which he might give for such purchases and that he would turn over to them the proceeds of the sales. Manard thereafter bought of these plaintiffs one hundred and ninety-four head of hogs for the sum of $1,241.35, for which sum he gave plaintiffs a cheek on defendants’ bank. This check defendants refused to pay, and plaintiffs instituted this action (not on the check) but on the promise made by defendants to Manard, claiming that it was a promise for their benefit, inuring to them and on which they were entitled to sue.
In this case, at the time the promise claimed to have been made to Manare!, the promisee, he did not owe a debt to these plaintiffs. So the question arises whether, though no debt exists by the promisee to the third party until some time after the promise is made to the promisee, will such third party still be entitled, to claim it as for his benefit and sue upon it? The cases under this branch of the law seem, mostly, to have arisen where there was a subsisting debt, either due or to become due, owing by the promisee to the third party, and it is to that debt the promisor’s promise is specifically directed. We, however, can not see any good reason why the promise may not attach and become effective, though there is no present debt at the time the promise is made. Coster v. City of Albany, 43 N. Y. 412. And we therefore hold that in so far as this branch of the question before us is concerned, plaintiffs are not debarred of this action by the fact that Manard owed them nothing at the time defendants are said to have made him the promise aforesaid.
But there is still another qualification to the rule, quite as well established as the one just discussed, and that is, that the promise made by the promisor must have been made for the benefit of the third party and so intended by the parties. The beneficial intent must clearly appear from the agreement. Beveridge v. Railway, 112 N. Y. 26; Wright v. Terry, 23 Fla. 160; Vrooman
Now it is so manifest it needs no aid from argument that there is no evidence presented to us sustaining the contract contended for by plaintiffs and by which they claim to hold the defendants, under the law which we have discussed. There is no evidence whatever that defendants entered into an agreement with Manard that they would pay to cheek holders the checks which he might thereafter give them and that he would continue to buy stock. The fact shown that they had theretofore for a long space of time been paying his checks, is of no consequence. If it was, most every bank in business would find itself liable to a suit at the hands of third parties with whom they have no concern. The only other testimony which could be supposed to relate to the contract claimed is that of Manard himself and one of the defendants. The former stated that defendants came to see him about securing what he then owed them. That he could not do so, as his wife would refuse to sign a mortgage for that purpose, and he said: “What do you men want me to do, to quit or to try to make this money back; and Mr. Goodale said no, we do not want you to quit
We can not understand how it could be found from these statements that defendants made a specific agreement of the nature required by the law. They, at most, only represent a loose conversation, expressive of a willingness that he might go ahead in the business in which he was then engaged. They do not show an understanding arrived at by the parties, whereby one side agreed to pay the other’s checks and the other to continue to buy stock. It certainly w.ould be unreasonable to suppose that by the conversation quoted, defendants, as bankers, were giving Manard authority with the community to bind them to the payment of whatever checks he might issue in payment for live stock and that this was done for the benefit of whoever might accept Manard’s check. It seems to us to sustain this judgment would be a dangerous precedent. The demurrer to plaintiffs’ testimony should have been sustained.
With the concurrence of the other judges the judgment is reversed.