62 Neb. 832 | Neb. | 1901
This cause originated in the county court for Saunders county. After trial an appeal was taken to the district court. A trial was had in the district court to the court and a jury, which resulted in a verdict and judgment against the defendants therein, Phineas Williams and
The above constitutes the material averments in the pleadings of the plaintiffs with reference to the character of the contract on -which a recovery is sought against both defendants. While the defendant Williams denies any agreement with the plaintiff, either as an original undertaking or as guarantor of the debts of Welty, the evidence, we think, warrants the conclusion of an agreement to pay the account on which the action is founded, either as guarantor or as promisor on an independent contract
It is argued that because there is evidence tending to show that Williams had secured himself by taking a mortgage on Welty’s property, and also that the plaintiffs would not have extended the credit had it not been for their reliance on Williams’s promise to pay the debt, he should be held responsible as a principal in the transaction. But these facts are equally consistent with his liability as guarantor. The plaintiffs may have relied on his verbal guaranty of payment of the debt of Welty, if such be the legal effect of the transaction, and Williams may have undertaken to obtain security from Welty because of such verbal guaranty, and yet these facts would not justify us in construing a collateral into an original undertaking. These facts, admitting them to be established, do not materially aid us in determining the true character of the liability of defendant Williams under the agreement mentioned. We are of the opinion that the question hinges and must turn on the action of the parties under and in pursuance of the alleged agreement, and especially of the plaintiffs, in what they have said and done with reference to the credit extended to and Liability sought to be imposed on the defendant Welty. They have obtained a judgment against him which could have been done only on the theory that the contract' for the sale of the merchandise sued for was made with him and that he thereby became legally liable for the payment of the value thereof. They charged the goods to him, and he made and was credited on the account with certain payments. While this is not conclusive standing alone, when taken in connection with other action of the plaintiffs it admits of no other conclusion than that the credit
The authorities appear entirely harmonious in support of the rule that if the beneficiary or person for whose use the goods áre furnished is liable at all by reason thereof, any other promise by a third person to pay the same debt must be-in writing, otherwise it is void by operation of the provisions of the statute of frauds. Reed, Statute of Frauds, sec. 31, and authorities there cited. In Cowdin v. Gottgetreu, 55 N. Y., 650, it is stated in the headnotes that: “While a person may become liable.upon a parol promise for goods purchased which are delivered to and' are intended for the use of another, in order to make him so the debt must be his only; he must be exclusively liable therefor.” In speaking of the rule applicable to the same state of facts as in the case at bar, it is observed by
In the case at bar the liability of Welty, the person for whom it is alleged the debt was contracted and promised to be paid by Williams, has been pleaded and proved in the proceedings heretofore taken in this cause, and it now stands as a. final adjudication that such liability as to him exists in favor of the promisees, the plaintiffs in the action; and, applying the rule we have just discussed, it must follow, as a necessary sequence, that Williams’s agreement to pay the debt is collateral only, and, not being in writing, is void by reason of the statute of frauds, and the .judgment as to him must be reversed and he
Judgment accordingly.