35 Wis. 111 | Wis. | 1874
In Dyer v. Gibson, 16 Wis., 557, the chief justice opens the opinion with some observations so very pertinent to the facts of this case and the question of law involved, that I cannot do better than quote them here. He says: “We cannot discuss the question whether the promise of one person, though in form to answer for the still subsisting debt of another, if founded upon a new and sufficient consideration moving from the creditor and promisee to the promisor, and beneficial to the latter, is within the statute of frauds, and therefore void unless it be in writing expressing the consideration and subscribed by the party making it. Decision has been multiplied upon decision, with scarce a syllable of conflict, for more than a century, that such a promise is not reached by the statute. * * The distinction is between cases where the person promising has for his object a benefit accruing to himself, in which the original debtor has no interest, and from which he derives no advantage, and where his primary and leading object is-to become surety for the debt of another without benefit to himself, but for the exclusive advantage of the other parties to the contract.” The distinction here made, that where the party promising has for his object some benefit and advantage accruing to himself, and on that consideration makes the promise, distinguishes the case of an original undertaking from one within the statute. Brown v. Weber, 38 N. Y., 187.
In the present case, there can be no doubt that the jury found, under the instructions of the court, that the defendant agreed
It is said the plaintiff was not entitled to a lien upon the logs by reason of his services, because he acted as cook for Mc-Gilton, Bracklin & Co., and did not perform labor directly upon the logs. We do not agree in this construction of the statute giving a lien for labor and services upon logs and lumber. But it is unimportant whether the plaintiff in fact had a valid lien or not. The defendant treated with him on the assumption that he had such a lien, and chose rather to buy him off than to contest its validity.
It results from these views that the judgment of the circuit court must be affirmed.
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.