By the Court,
Nelson, J.It was said on the argument, that the promise of the defendant upon which this suit is brought was bad under the statute of frauds, on the ground that it was a collateral undertaking for Jonathan Brooks, and there was no consideration in the note or memorandum produced and relied on. The objection was not made at the trial, which is probably a sufficient answer, but we are satisfied if it had been, it could not be sustained. The delivery of the deed to the defendant by the plaintiffs, which is stated in the written memorandum, constitutes a good consideration for his undertaking, 1 Caines, 45; 3 Johns. R. 100 ; it is fair to infer that, without such engagement on the part of the defendant, the plaintiffs would not have parted with their title upon the sole responsibility of Jonathan Brooks. Here was an inju*210ry or loss to the plaintiffs, if not benefit to the defendant, which creates a sufficient consideration.
It is conceded there is no valid objection to the recovery of the price of lot No. 72, as the agreement is absolute to pay therefor $1 per acre. On survey, the lot fell short of the estimate by the parties, and therefore a deduction was made on the trial. Nor do I perceive any objection to the recovery of the value of the nineteen and a half acres of lot No. 54, as Brooks compromised with one of the tenants, as he was authorized to do by the agreement, and received for the same $156. A reasonable construction of that instrument obligates Jonathan Brooks to pay to the plaintiffs the amount received on a compromise with the tenants, and of course the defendant is bound to see that obligation fulfilled. Any other construction would render the agreement absurd and nugatory. But the value of the sixty acres, parcel of lot No. 54, which remained in Brooks undisposed of in his lifetime, was, I think, erroneously included in the recovery.
Although the agreement is obscurely drawn, and its true meaning somewhat difficult to ascertain, yet, so far as lot No. 54 is concerned, the object seems to have been to obtain a compromise with the tenants, who were probably holding adversely to the plaintiffs, by inducing them either jto purchase or give up possession. If they purchased, the consideration belonged to the plaintiffs, and Jonathan Brooks was to be compensated for his trouble; if they refused and gave up possession, then he was to hold the same for the benefit of the plaintiffs. This is fairly to be inferred from an examination of the whole instrument, and particularly by reference to the terms agreed on as to the other lot. As to that a price was stipulated, which Jonathan Brooks was to pay if he obtained possession ; and we are bound to infer that if he was to be holden as purchaser of this lot also, a like stipulation would have been made. As to this lot, however, the only obligation imposed was to settle with the tenants, by receiving the balance due on an old contract which had been given for the lot, or he was otherwise to act as in his judgment he should see fit. He did compromise by receiving $156 for part, and possession of sixty acres of land. The money he was bound to *211pay over, and the sixty acres ho held as trustee for the plaintiffs. The title was probably given to him by them, to enable him to complete any arrangements he might make with the tenants. Most clearly, if it was intended to hold him personally for the value of such part as he obtained possession of, on any arrangement he might make, it should and would have been so stipulated in the agreement.
But it is said that inasmuch as the sixty acres have been sold on judgment and execution for the benefit of Jonathan Brooks, the defendant ought to be accountable to the plaintiffs for the value. Whether this consequence would follow from the agreement, it is not important to examine, though I am inclined to think it would. It is clear that the title still remains in the heirs of Jonathan Brooks, and in equity they would be considered as holding it subject to the trust or right of the plaintiffs. The judgment of Clark is a lien upon the land at law, but in equity such lien would be subject to the rights of the plaintiffs. 1 Paige, 125. 2 id. 267. The sale on the execution was inoperative, and passed no title to the purchaser. After the death of a defendant, no execution can issue against his personal representatives, heirs or terre-tenants, without a scire facias. 2 Saund. 6, n. 1, 72, a. Bacon, tit. Execution, 731, pi. 14, note. 2 Tidd, 1029. 2 Archb. Pr. 88. The reasons given are, that a new party is affected by the execution, and there would be a discrepancy between it and the record, and indeed there is no authority for the process. A scire facias, therefore, is necessary not only to make these new parties parties to the record, put to give them a day in court to shew cause, if any, against the application of the property to the discharge of the judgment. A practice has been reluctantly sanctioned by the courts, which at first view would seem to be an exception to the above rule; but it is not. If a defendant dies within the year and day, (the time within which an execution may issue of course against him if living,) execution may issue after, provided it can be tested according to the practice of the court before his death. Graham’s Pr. 308, 650. 1 Archb. Pr. 282. 2 id. 90. Though this practice is well settled, an examination of the English cases will shew that it was long contested, and its justice and propriety sen*212ously questioned, as in effect it gave an unjust preference to the plaintiff in the execution, over prior claims in the distribution of the assets. 7 T. R. 20. 6 id. 368. 1 Bos. & PuL 571. The reasons of this practice are, that the execution as to the defendant relates to the teste and binds the goods from that time, and there is therefore no incongruity or defect in the record, as that would shew the goods bound before the death of the defendant. According to this theory, there is no new party interested or affected, and the case is viewed in the same light as if the execution had actually issued, the property taken and in possession of the law at the time of the death of the defendant. With the exception just stated, even a/t. fa. cannot be issued after the death of the defendant until the judgment is revived, and the reasons given for it have no application to any other species of execution, and it is expressly confined to the goods and chattels of the deceased. 2 Saund. 6, n. 1. 2 Ld. Raym. 849. 1 Archb. Pr. 282. 2 id. 88. All the cases to be found in the books in which the exception is stated relate to the common law writ off. fa., which goes only against the goods and chattels of the defendant. 2 Tidd, 915. 1 Saund. 219, e. /. It is the judgment which binds the land, and the execution is used only as process by which to raise the debt out of it. Witli us the land is sold absolutely, giving fifteen months credit on the judgment to the defendant to redeem. In England, the elegit directs the sheriff to deliver a moiety, of which the plaintiff holds possession till the debt is paid, and the levari facias appropriates the rents and profits on like terms. The teste of these writs is unimportant, except so far as the regularity of the process is concerned. On the death of the defendant, the real estate descends to his heirs, and to allow execution to be afterwards issued and the lands sold would be affecting the rights of new parties, without an opportunity to be heard. Serjeant Williams, in his note to Jefferson et al. v. Morton et al., 2 Saund. 6, says, that in case of the death of a defendant within the year and day, the plaintiff cannot sue out an elegit under the statute, 2 West, c. 18, against his lands in the hands of the heir or terre-tenants, or generally any other execution, without a sd.fa., although he may in some cases have a jifa, against the goods in the hands *213of the executor, referring to the exception above stated. So if the conusor dies within the year, the conusee cannot have an elegit against his heirs or terre-tenants without such writ, the rule being, he says, that where a new person, who was not a party to a judgment or recognizance, becomes chargeable to the execution, there must be a scire facias to make him a party to the judgment or recognizance, if the above views be correct, then the sixty acres have not been appropriated for the benefit of Jonathan Brooks, and if he held as trustee for the plaintiffs, as I am of opinion he did, a new trial must be granted, unless the plaintiff will deduct $386,68^ the amount recovered for the sixty acres. The remedy in respect to the sixty acres must be in another forum. I perceive no well founded objection to the interest as charged.
New trial granted, unless plaintiffs deduct $386,68 from the verdict.