After advisement the following opinion was delivered:
By the Chancellor.The first if not the principal objection, which is urged by the counsel for the plaintiff in error against the judgment of the supreme court is, that the covenant upon which the suit was brought was void for maintenance. In answer to this, it is insisted by the counsel for the adverse party, that maintenance was not an of-fence at the common law, and that as the legislature has intentionally repealed all the statutory provisions on the subject, except as to the buying and selling of pretended titles to land, maintenance was not illegal at the time this covenant was given. I have very little doubt that most of the absurd rules relative to maintenance, which are found in the early reports of the English courts of justice, were founded upon the broad and sweeping provisions of the statutes 3 Edward I. ch. 28 and ch. 33, and 28 Edw. I. st. 3, ch. 11, and of several other statutes of the same kind, passed in the reigns of Edward the third and of the second Richard. Probably the term maintenance was unknown to the law previous to the passage of the statutes on this subject in the time of Edward the first; but that species of maintenance called champerty, or Champarty as it was originally spelled, see Year Book, 8 Hen. 5, p. 8, appears to have been an of-fence at the common law. It is unquestionably derived from an old French law term, champart, which was, used to denote a customary field rent, consisting of a certain part of. the crops in kind ; which answers to the ordinary case in this country of renting a farm for a part or share of the produce. 3 Guyot’s Repert. de Jurisp. 85. Champerty, therefore, was probably first' used in England as a law term, *406by the followers of William of Normandy and their successors, to denote an illegal agreement by a stranger to assist in the prosecution of a suit, in consideration of the subsequent receipt of a part of the produce or fruits of the litigation. Sir Edward Coke says an action of-maintenance lies at the common law ; and if maintenance in general was against the common law, a fortiori champerty, for that of all maintenance is the worst; and in reference to the statute, 3 Edward I. ch. 25, which was the first statute on the subject of champerty, and before any of the statutes of maintenance, he refers to Bracton, who wrote before the passing of this first statute of champerty, showing that champerty was forbidden by the common law as calculated to suppress justice and truth. He therefore concludes it is malum in se by the common law, as well as malum prohibitum by the statutes. Coke’s 2 Inst. 208. The note of the revisers also shows that they well understood the distinction between this most odious species of maintenance called champerty, and maintenance in the ordinary sense of the term : for they say, it is proposed to abolish the .law of maintenance, and to qualify that of champerty, by permitting mortgages of land in dispute to raise money, under guards a”nd -restrictions which will prevent abuse.” 3 R. S. 828, App. 2d ed. I am prepared to say that all the absurd doctrines of maintenance that grew out of the statutes which might have been necessary in a semi-barbarous age, were swept away by the recent revision of the laws, and many of them had been virtually abrogated long before that time. I do not think, however, that agreements actually champertous, as where a stranger to the subject of the litigation, who has no interest therein in law or equity, or in expectancy, by the ties of blood or affinity, agrees to assist in embroiling his neighbors in litigation, or in carrying their suits through the different courts after they are commenced, upon a stipulation that he shall receive a share of the fruits of the litigation as a reward for his mischievous 'interference, can be enforced in courts of justice.
I have therefore examined the case now under consideration to see if it could, upon any view of the facts, be brought *407within this principle. I find that it steers clear of every thing like champerty, and it certainly was not maintenance so far as the plaintiff was concerned. The remarks of Justice Bayley in Bell v. Smith, 5 Barn. & Cress. 188, are therefore wholly inapplicable to this case. Here the. note against the two Petries was not a litigated claim, purchased up or prosecuted by the plaintiff as a stranger, under an agreement that he should have a part of the fruits of the litigation. On the contrary, it was a negotiable note transferred to him by Feeter in part payment of a debt, under a representation that it was due and against a responsible farmer, and upon a written guaranty that it was collectable 3 and he had not the least reason to suspect the contrary until after it was put in suit. Under such circumstances, as Feeter insisted that the note was justly due to him at the time of the transfer, upon the facts which he afterwards swore to upon the trial, the plaintiff was probably bound to bring his cause to trial to enable him to have his remedy over against Feeter for the debt and cost of suit, if he should not succeed in recovering the same of the makers of the note. He was willing, therefore, to release his claim upon Feeter, so that he might be a witness to rebut the defence which the defendants had set up, provided Feeter would procure some one of his friends to come forward and assume his responsibility as guarantor. Such an agreement would have been corrupt and illegal, if the plaintiff had supposed that an arrangement was to be made between Feeter and his friend who became the substantial guarantor, that the latter should have a claim back upon Feeter to indemnify him against this substituted guaranty. But as the defendant does not pretend that he made such an agreement to render Feeter apparently a competent witness, when he was in fact still interested by reason of this new indemnity to the guarantor, I presume there was no such agreement between them. Indeed such an arrangement between Feeter and Small might be indictable as a conspiracy to impose upon the court and tor prevent the due administration of justice, so as to subject them to an indictment for a criminal offence. See 2 R. S. 692, § 8, sub. 6. The court cannot, therefore, in *408the absence of any allegation or proof of such a conspiracy, presume that any thing of that kind was intended either by Feeter or Small. So far as the plaintiff was concerned he certainly was not cognizant of any such agreement, and nothing was said in the presence of his counsel, from which such a corrupt agreement could be inferred. The counsel for the plaintiff was not authorized to act for him in procuring some one to be the substituted guarantor, but merely to approve of the sufficiency of such person as should be offered on the part of Feeter. What arrangements may have been made between the defendant and Feeter, or what information the latter may have given to Small before they came to the plaintiff’s counsel to have the guaranty signed and delivered, it was impossible for the counsel to know. But it cannot fairly be presumed that Feeter induced the defendant to call upon the counsel for the purpose of executing such a paper, without explaining ,to him beforehand the object and intent of the guaranty. It was not therefore the duty of the counsel for the plaintiff to tell him what he had a right to presume he already knew, except so far as inquiries were made in his presence showing that the defendant was ignorant of the nature of the defence and of the responsibility he was assuming.
No pecuniary consideration passing directly between the plaintiff and the defendant was necessary, to support the new guaranty. The injury which the plaintiff might sustain by relinquishing the guaranty of Feeler, was the real consideration, and that was sufficient. If there was any intentional fraud, or illegality, or any conspiracy to maintain a false suit, or to impose upon the court, Mott was not a party to it, or cognizant of it. He is in the same situation as if the defendant, without seeing either him or his counsel, had executed and delivered this guaranty to Feeler, to carry to Mott and get a release from his original indemnity. If the business had been transacted in that form, I think no court upon this evidence could have supposed that the defendant had sustained the allegations in either of his special pleas.
*409The offer to contradict what the witness swore to on the first trial was properly rejected. Proof that he was under a mistake, or even that he swore corruptly on that occasion, would not better the defendant’s case, as it would not be sufficient even to create a suspicion that the plaintiff had any reason to suppose he intended to swear to an untruth, .aud something more than suspicion would be necessary to authorize a jury to infer that the plaintiff was guilty of subornation of perjury. If Feeler was attempting to enforce the collection of a note which he knew was not justly due to him, in consequence of what had taken place before he became the owner of such note, it is certainly to be regretted that this defendant volunteered as his friend, to assist him in collecting it, in payment of the debt to Mott. But as there was no evidence which could have authorized the jury to find a verdict for the defendant upon any of the issues charging the plaintiff as a participator in any fraud or known illegality, the learned judge who tried the cause very properly decided that there was not sufficient evidence to go to the jury on those issues. The sufficiency of the evidence, where the facts are undisputed, is a question of law for the court to decide.
For these reasons I think the judgment of the court below should be affirmed.
On the question-being put, Shall this judgment he reversed 1 the members of the court divided: four answering in the affirmative, and seventeen in the negative. Whereupon the judgment of the court was affirmed.