The Court of Appeals have held that the defendants are not liable upon the writing in question as upon a note importing a consideration, (Bradt v. Krank, 164 N. Y. 515.) Upon the second trial the plaintiffs, abandoning that claim, seek to hold them as upon a written promise to pay the sum specified, based upon a valuable consideration.
To this the defendants make two answers:
Fvrst. That no consideration for the promise has been shown.
Second. That the promise being clearly and by its very terms one to answer for the debt, default or miscarriage of another, it must be in writing under the Statute of Frauds, and that the writing in question is not sufficient under that statute to sustain the liability claimed against the defendants.
The defendants’ first objection is not free from doubt, but it is not necessary to pass upon that question for the reason that their second objection is a complete answer to the plaintiffs’ right of recovery.
The evidence as to the circumstances under which the writing was executed and delivered is so very meager that it is extremely difficult to tell precisely what they were ; but one fact seems clearly to appear, that the writing, if it was executed and delivered to the plaintiffs upon any consideration whatever, was executed and delivered upon their promise to withhold the entry of judgment against Church & Jones, discontinue the action then pending against them and extend the time of payment of the debt then owing from them to the plaintiffs. The contract, then, between the plaintiffs and the defendants was an executory one as to both parties. The plaintiffs were to discontinue pressing their claim against Church & Jones and extend the time for its payment, and the defendants, on their part, were to pay the debt within a time specified. The writing in question expresses but a small part of that agreement and also incorrectly expresses that part of the agreement which the defendants were to cany out. Thus the writing expresses an absolute agreement on the defendants’ part to pay that debt of Church & Jones on Tuesday of the next week, while the actual agreement clearly was to pay it on condition that the plaintiffs would discontinue the action and extend the time for its payment. So the writing not only omits to express that part of the agreement which the *516plaintiffs assumed^ but fails to express a very important part of the agreement which the defendants assumed.
Therefore, the agreement is not sufficient under the statute. ■
It is a .well-settled rule in this State that the memorandum required by the statute “ must contain all the substantial and material terms of the contract between the parties. It must show on its. face what the whole agreement is so far as the same is executory, and remains to be performed, and rests upon unfulfilled promise.” (Drake v. Seamam, 97 N. Y, 230, 234; Barney v. Forbes, 118 id. 585.)
“ The whole current of authority in this state is that the memorandum must contain substantially the whole agreement, and all its material terms and conditions, so that one reading it can understand from it what the agreement is.” (Mentz v. Newwitter, 122 N. Y. 497.)
The plaintiffs seek to avoid this difficulty by urging that the contract on their, part was wholly executed when the defendants’ written promise was given. But evidently this claim is not correct. The evidence of Becker shows that the writing in question had been signed by Krank and delivered to him before any act whatever was done towards discontinuing the action. It was in his possession and exhibited by him to the magistrate when he directed the discontinuance of the action. Very clearly when he received it his part of the agreement was still to be performed, and if he had then refused to discontinue he would have had in his possession a written agreement that apparently imposed' upon the defendants an obligation they never assumed. When the Writing was executed and delivered, the condition upon which the defendants were to make the payment therein promised was still unperformed by the plaintiffs and was nowhere expressed in such writing. It was, therefore, under the authorities above cited, insufficient to sustain the promise.
. The plaintiffs' further urge that the defendants’ promise contained in the writing was not one to pay the debt of another, but to pay an original one of their own.
The facts .will not sustain this claim. So far as the evidence discloses, no advantage or benefit whatever passed to these defendants in consideration of their promise. The sole consideration was one running to Church & Jones to discontinue against them and extend *517the payment of then* debt. No proof that such action was of any benefit whatever to the defendants is anywhere given. (See White v. Rintoul, 108 N. Y. 222.)
No valid contract, therefore, was proven against the defendants, and for that reason the nonsuit should have been granted. Judgment reversed and new trial granted, costs to abide the event.
All cóncurred.
Judgment reversed on law and facts and new trial granted, with costs to appellants to abide event.