The facts out of which this action arose are not complicated. It Appears that the defendant-sold to one Clara Holsten, through her husband, acting as her agent-,- a certain saloon, the consideration -therefor being $5,500, payable by the assumption of. a mortgage of $2,000, held by S. Liebmann’s Sons, upon the property therein,-and -the remainder, $3,500, in notes payable $100 each month. Of these -jiotes, $1,500 were indorsed by the plaintiff. Holsten failed to carry .out the provisions of her agreement and pay the notes as they matured. Dicing the month of January, 1898, the. plaintiff saw the defendant and arranged an exchange for four of the fifteen
George Holsten, the husband of Clara Holsten, who conducted the negotiations, testified that the defendant asked him to transfer the property to Staengler, and stated that the defendant said if he would accept the offer of Staengler that Ments would be released upon his notes; and that in pursuance of such statement he permitted the defendant to negotiate a transfer of the property to Staengler, and the place was subsequently surrendered to him. The plaintiff testified that the defendant informed him that if he made the transfer to Staengler he would be relieved from liability, and that subsequently the defendant informed him that the deal had been accepted, and that he would be relieved. This testimony was denied by the defendant. Thereafter, at the solicitation of líolsten and the plaintiff, the defendant executed and delivered a paper reciting that Holsten had sold the saloon, had paid the defendant in full, and that hó had no claim against her whatever. Holstén and the plaintiff testified that this paper was executed as a release from all liability,'and. by the defendant it was testified that it was not intended to operate as a release, but was executed for the purpose of enabling Holsten to exhibit it to other persons from whom he expected to obtain credit, and that it was executed for no other purpose.
In this respect the claim of the defendant is at variance with hid pleading. It was averred .in the complaint that the defendant executed the instrument as a release of all indebtedness, and this is admitted by the answer.
We think the case presented alone a question, of fact from which the court was authorized to find that the defendant 'agreed, in consideration of the transfer of the saloon property to Staengler, that
■ It follows that the 'judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
All concurred.
.Judgment affirmed, with .costs,
