The Supreme Court reversed the decree' of the Common Pleas and dismissed the bill on February 28, 1881, in the following opinion, per
Sterrett, J.:This case hinges solely on the allegation of fact contained in the bill, that the defendant, Barclay, agreed to pay half the loss that might result from the single venture or purchase of stock therein mentioned. The burden of proving that fact was on the plaintiff'; and, aside from other considerations, he was not entitled to a decree unless he succeeded in doing so.
The stock was procured by defendant in May, 1873, through the agency of a broker, employed by him for that purpose; but the purchase money was all paid by plaintiff, to whom the stock was transferred and certificate issued. Cotemporanéous therewith he signed and delivered to defendant the following paper, viz:
Philadelphia, May 15, 1863.
Hue William K. Barclay one-half the gain on five hundred shares of the preferred stock of the Union Canal Company, purchased by him and myself on joint account, when sold agreeably to his order, less the interest at six per cent, per ■annum on $1,593.75 from date to date of the aforesaid sale, I holding the certificate of said stock transferred to my name.
(Signed) T. M. Eettew.
This paper evidently contemplated a sale of the stock, with Barclay’s assent, at a price that would yield a profit, the .half of which, less interest on one-half the original cost, was pay*232able to him. It made no provision for sharing any loss in the venture, nor does it even suggest the idea of loss. Barclay furnished none of the money used in the purchase; but, inasmuch as the stock was procured through his agency, and he was expected to promote the success of the venture, it appears to have been the intention to secure for him one-half of the-net gain, and to this end it was provided the sale should be “agreeable to his order.” Such, we think, is the correct construction of the paper, especially when viewed in the light of facts, which were uncontradicted. It may have been an unwise arrangement on the part of plaintiff, but with that we have nothing to do in construing the paper which he executed. If he had such unbounded confidence in the success of the speculation as to risk his money in reliance on a profitable sale as the only means of reimbursement he has no just reason to complain. In the absence of an express or implied agreement to share the loss, he has no claim on the defendant. The paper itself furnishes no evidence of such agreement; on the contrary it rather justifies the inference that defendant assumed ' no liability, and, to that extent, accords with his version of the transaction as given in the answer; and we think the weight of the other evidence is to the same effect. The answer is directly responsive to the main allegation in the bill, and, in express terms, denies that defendant was to bear any loss. The accepted doctrine of equity is that the answer, in so far as it is directly responsive to any material allegation in the bill, is not only evidence, but conclusive proof in favor of the-defendant, “unless it is overcome by the satisfactory testimony of opposing witnesses, or of one witness, corroborated by other-circumstances and facts which give it greater weight than the answer, or which are equivalent in weight to a second witness ;” Story’s Equity Jurisprudence, § 1528. Or, as the same learned author otherwise expresses the doctrine : “ When the defendant, in express terms, negatives the allegations of the bill, and the evidence is only of one person, affirming as a witness, what has been so negatived, the Court will neither make a decree, nor send the case to be tried at law, but simply dismiss the bill. In Yandegrift vs. Herbert, 3 O. E. Green, 466, the Chancellor, after recognizing the same rule, says that *233inasmuch as the plaiutiff appeals to the conscience of the defendant, and compels him to be a witness against himself, he is not. allowed to impeach the credibility of the defendant, but must overcome his answer by stronger evidence.
What is there then, in this ease, to overcome the responsive denial of the answer, corroborated as it is, to some extent, by the paper,above quoted ? The plaintiff' claims that his own testimony, together with proof extracted from defendant’s correspondence, is sufficient for that purpose. As to defendant’s letters, they practically amount to nothing as evidence of an agreement on his part to share the loss. Some of them may be' regarded as evasive, but they contain no admission of liability. In short.,' there is no evidence in the case, outside of plaintiff’s own testimony, that tends, in any material degree to weaken the force of the answer. Certainly none that, in the exercise of the utmost liberality, cap be regarded as equivalent to the testimony of one witness.
It is a question whether the plaintiff’s testimony, affirming-as a witness what is alleged in his bill, should be accepted as the testimony of one witness in overcoming the responsive denial of the answer. Without expressing any opinion on that question, the fact that he is not a disinterested witness-should be taken into consideration in weighing his testimony. In speaking of such testimony, the Chancellor, in the case last-cited, says, the fact of the interest of the witness as a party to the suit must be taken into consideration, while the effect given to the responsive answer is arbitrarily fixed without-reference to the interests of defendant.
From what has been said, it is manifest that an application of the chancery rule, that the responsive denial of the answer must prevail, unless overcome by testimony of two witnesses, or evidence equivalent thereto, leaves the plaintiff without adequate proof of the cardinal allegation of fact in his case. There was error in finding that he agreed to bear part of the loss incident to the purchase of the stock. Of this there was no direct evidence; nor is there anything in the case from which such an agreement can fairly arise by implication.
The view we have taken of the case ren lers it unnecessary *234to consider the other grounds on which a reversal of the decree }s urged.
The claim is very stale.. The bill was filed about thirteen years after defendant’s alleged refusal to assent to a sale of the stock. There was no concealment; nor is there any material averment in the bill that was not known long before it was filed. The delay was inexcusable and the bill might well be dismissed on the ground of laches. The claim is based, as we have seen, on a single transaction, and if there had been any merit in the plaintiff’s case, he had an adequate remedy at law.
Decree reversed and bill dismissed, and it is ordered the ■appellee pay the costs, including costs of this appeal.