The defendant contends that this action cannot be maintained, for the reason that the note secured by the mortgage under which the plaintiff claims to have derived title to the oxen replevied was made without any legal or valid consideration. The evidence produced upon the trial shows that the plaintiff held a note against Lafayette Williams, a brother of the plaintiff, on which there remained due the sum of S 1894.87; that the payment of it was secured by a mortgage upon the real estate of the said Lafayette, and by the guaranty of Almond Williams, another brother, and in part also by notes given by the defendant for $ 800 to be held as collateral security; that all these parties then met, and it was agreed by and between the plaintiff and the defendant that the latter should assume the debt of Lafayette, and give his own note for the amount due to the plaintiff, who orally promised as a consideration therefor that he would release the defendant from the notes held as collateral security, would wholly discharge Almond from his guaranty, and would, on payment of the note then to be given by the defendant, transfer and assign to him all the plaintiff’s interest in the real estate conveyed to him in mortgage by Lafayette Williams. Upon this consideration the note first mentioned was made and given by the defendant to the plaintiff, and at the same time the oxen replevied were conveyed to him in mortgage as security.
The defendant now insists, that as the contract was entire and the promise of the plaintiff was in fact to convey an interest in real estate, and was not made in writing, it cannot by means of the statute of frauds be enforced; and therefore that the consideration of the note is illegal and void. Rev. Sts. c. 74, § 1. But it is very obvious that the whole consideration is not obnoxious to that objection. It does not apply at all to the promise to surrender to the defendant his own notes for $ 800, or to the release and discharge of Almond from the obligations arising under his guaranty. These are separable from the promise to assign and transfer the interest in real estate held by the plaintiff under the mortgage of Lafayette; and to that extent the consideration is perfectly good. Irvine v. Stones
There was evidence submitted to the jury tending to show that the papers and memoranda produced upon the trial, and concerning which the plaintiff testified, were exhibited to the defendant when the computation to ascertain the amount due in the note of Lafayette was made, and that they contained a statement of the several items upon which the amount of indebtedness for which his own note was given was ascertained. It was right therefore to allow them to be submitted to the jury,
Exceptions overruled.
