Allen v. Eighmie

Dykman, J.:

This is an action founded on a guarantee of payment of certain railroad bonds. A trial has been had at Circuit, and a verdict rendered for the plaintiff. This appeal is from the judgment entered on the verdict, and brings to this court questions of law only. (Code of Civil Procedure, § 1346, sub. 2.)

The evidence tended to show that the defendant was the father-in-law of the plaintiff, whose husband was dead ; that the plaintiff had one thousand dollars in the hands of Taylor Brothers, and the defendant owed her nineteen hundred and seventy dollars. About the first of May, 1871, the plaintiff received a letter from the defendant requesting her to meet him and M. C. Smith at the Morgan House, in Poughkeepsie, on the second day of May, 1871. She met them there, and Smith produced three bonds of one thousand dollars each of the Dutchess and Columbia Kailroad Company, which he requested her to purchase.; that she hesitated, and went to consult her uncle, who was cashier at the Fallkill Bank, who advised her to invest her money in city bonds. She informed the defendant of the advice, and he thereupon told her that city bonds were good, and these railroad bonds were good also, and he would advise her to take these; and if she did take them he would guarantee them so that it would be no loss to her; they would be good any way to her. That in reliance upon this guarantee she took the bonds, delivered up to the defendant her notes for nineteen hundred dollars, and an indebtedness of his to her of seventy dollars besides, and also the note of Taylor Brothers for one thousand dollars. The price of the bonds was twenty five hundred dollars.

The claim of the plaintiff is that the defendant made himself a joint actor in the purchase of these bonds ; that he procured her presence at the appointed time and place, and then said to her substantially, if she would buy the bonds he would guarantee their payment, and see that she suffered no loss by so doing; and that she made the purchase of the bonds at his request, *561and upon his promise to make them good in case they were not good. It must now be presumed that the jury found these facts, for the precise question was submitted to them by the charge.

This, then, being the contract, the question here is whether it falls within the condemnation of the statute of frauds. We cannot, on this appeal, examine the testimony for the purpose of ascertaining whether it is sufficient, for there is certainly some evidence to sustain the verdict. It is quite true that, in a sense, the defendant promised to pay the debt of another, but he did much more; he advised the plaintiff to buy the bonds, and told her if she did so no loss should come to her, and she made the purchase and parted with her money in reliance upon that promise. He effected the sale, and was the sole cause of the purchase. The transaction is the same as if he owned the bonds himself, so far as the question of originality is concerned. It is not necessary that the seller of goods shall be the owner, in order to make him liable upon a guarantee in respect to them, and as the defendant induced the plaintiff to purchase these bonds by his guarantee that he would make them good, and thus induced her to make the purchase and part with her money, he is hable upon his guarantee, and the case is not within the statute of frauds. Even if the transaction between the plaintiff and defendant at the time she made the purchase is to be considered as a promise on his part, to pay the debt of the railroad company, it is not then within the statute of frauds; for where the promise to pay the debt of another arises out of some new and original consideration of benefit or harmony between the newly contracting parties, the case is not within the statute of frauds. This principle was enunciated by Chancellor Kent in Leonard v. Vredenburgh (8 Johns., 29), and was recognized by Judge Comstock in his very exhaustive opinion in Mallory v. Gillett (21 N. Y., 418).

These considerations show that the judge at Circuit properly denied the motion for a nonsuit, and that the judgment must be affirmed.

There are two or three other grounds upon which it is claimed, the jury might have found for the plaintiff; but as the judgment *562stands firmly and satisfactorily upon the first ground examined, we do not think it worth while to go over the other in detail.

Judgment should be affirmed with costs.

Gilbert, J., concurred; Barnard, P. J., not sitting.

Judgment affirmed, with costs.