Elder v. Warfield

Buchanan, Ch. J.

delivered the opinion of the Court. The bill of exceptions, on which this case is brought up, was taken to the refusal of the court below to direct the jury that the plain*395tiff was not entitled to recover; and the fourth section of the statute of frauds, by which it is provided, “that no action shall be brought, whereby to charge the defendant upon any special promise to answer for the debt, default or miscarriage, of another person, unless the agreement upon which such action shall be brought, or some memorandum or note thereof, shall be in writing, and signed by the party to be charged therewith, or some other person thereunto, by him properly authorised,” is relied upon to sustain the appeal.

The record does not inform us why the court refused to give the direction prayed; whether on the ground, that in the opinion of that tribunal, upon the facts in the cause, the plaintiff was entitled to recover, or because it was deemed the province of the jury to determine to whom the credit was originally given. The statute of frauds has furnished a wide field for the exercise of judicial ingenuity; and it is perhaps to be regretted, that in the range of construction any of its provisions should have been infringed or evaded.

A strict adherence to the letter, would, it is believed, have prevented much litigation, of which the introduction of exceptions has proved a fruitful source; it may now, however, be assumed, as the settled construction of that branch of the fourth section, on which this case depends, that every collateral understanding, or promise, to answer for the debt, default or miscarriage, of another, is within the statute, and void, if not ill writing; but that original undertakings are not within the statute, and need not be in writing.

Collateral and original, have become the technical terms, whereby to distinguish promises that are within, and such as are not within the statute. And as they are terms not used or defined in the statute itself, it may here be proper to notice the general distinguishing characteristics of collateral and original promises, as understood in relation to the statute of frauds.

Where there is a preexisting debt, or other liability, a promise by a third person, having immediate respect to, and founded upon the original liability, without any new consideration moving to him, to pay or answer for such debt or liability, is a collateral undertaking — as in the case of Fish vs. Hutchinson, 2 Wils. 94, which was an action founded on a promise by the *396defendant to pay a debt due from one Vichars to Fish, (for which Fish had brought suit,) in consideration that Fish would 'stay his action against Vichars, which being a promise to pay' the still subsisting debt of another, was held to be clearly within the statute. And so in Kirtham vs. Martin, 2 Barn. & Ald. 613, where A having wrongfully, killed the horse of B, a promise by C to pay B the damages he had sustained, in consideration that he would not sue A, was adjudged to be within the statute.

But where, distinct from the original liability, there is a new and superadded consideration for the promise, moving between the party promising, and him to whom the promise is made, in such case it is an original undertaking — as in Williams vs. Leper, 3 Burr. 1886, where the defendant, having got pos« session of goods which were subject to distress for rent in arrear, promised the landlord, (the plaintiff,) to pay him the rent, if he would desist from distraining.

There the promise by the defendant was to pay the amount of rent due from another; but the parting by the landlord with his lien on the goods in the defendant’s possession, and thus relieving them from liability to be distrained upon, was a new and superadded consideration, moving between the landlord and the defendant, and the immediate ground of the promise.

There are many cases proceeding upon this distinction, between a promise founded upon the liability alone of a third person, and one which is induced by a distinct and superadded consideration moving between the immediately contracting parties — as Anstey vs. Marden, 4 Bos. & Pull. 130; Castling vs. Aubert, 2 East, 325; and Read vs. Nash, 1 Wils. 305.

Again, where there is no previously existing debt, or other liability, but the promise of one is the inducement to, and ground of, the credit given to another, by which a debt or liability is created in him to whom the credit is given, such a promise is a collateral undertaking.

The general rule being, that wherever the party Undertaken for, is originally liable upon the same contract, the promise to answer for that liability is a collateral promise, and must be in writing. As if B gives credit to C for goods sold and delivered to him, on the promise of A to see him paid, or to pay *397him for them if C should not, in that case it is the immediate debt of C, for which an action will lie against him, and the promise of dl is a collateral undertaking to pay that debt, he~ Doing only as a security.

But where the party undertaken for is under no original liability, the promise is an original undertaking, and binding upon them, as if d? says to him, let C have goods to such an amount, and I will pay you; and the credit is given to ,B, in that case C being under no liability, there is nothing to which the promise of dl can be collateral; but dl being the immediate debtor, it is his original undertaking, and not a promise to answer for the debt of another. The case of Buckmyer vs. Darnall, 2 Ld. Raym. 1085, may be considered a leading and instructive case on this subject. And Watkins vs. Perkins, 1 Ld. Raym. 224; Harris vs. Huntback, 1 Burr. 371. Jones vs. Cooper, 1 Cowper, 227; Matson vs. Wharam, 2 T. R. 80; Anderson vs. Hayman, 1 H. Blk. 120; and Keate vs. Temple, 1 Bos. & Pull. 158 — are illustrative oí this geueral position, that whether a promise is collateral or original, depends upon the liability of the party undertaken for.

Hence the first point of inquiry in such cases is, whether the party undertaken for, is liable at all on the contract; or, to whom the credit was originally given? The existence of such liability being implied in the very notion of a collateral undertaking.

In ascertaining which, the extent of the undertaking, the expressions used, the situation of the parties, and all the circumstances of the case, should he taken into consideration; and in the case of goods, &e. furnished for the use of one at the instance of another, where the undertaking is collateral, the declaration in an action for the amount, founded on such collateral un er king, must be on the special promise.

But where it is an original undertaking or promise, the proper remedy is the action of indebitatus assumpsit.

This is an action of general indebitatus assumpsit, for goods furm ;hc i to Joseph Berrett, at the instance of the appellant, which is resisted on the ground of a- supposed subsisting liabi*398lity on the part of Berrett, to whom it is contended the credit Was originally given, and therefore, that the promise of the appellant-not being in writing, was void under the statute of frauds.

If Berrett was originally liable, it is very clear that the promise of the appellant was merely collateral, and within the statute; but whether he was or was not liable, depends upon the further’ question, to whom was the credit given? For if the credit was not given to him, but to the appellant, then it was not his debt,, but the immediate debt of the appellant, for which he is liable in this form of action, notwithstanding the promise was not in writing, being an original undertaking, and not a collateral promise, within the statute, to answer for the debt of qnother.

And even if Berrett has since become liable, such subsequent liability cannot have the effect to alter or change the original Character of the appellant’s promise; but such as it wag at the time of the contract, it is now. The inquiry therefore, at the trial, should have been, what was the predicament of the par-lies at the time the goods were delivered; was the credit given to Berrett on the-suretyship of the appellant, or was it given to the appellant himself alone? And not whether by subsequent circumstances, Berrett had rendered-himself liable.

It is the undoubted province of the court, to determine questions of law, arising upon the facts of a cause, and the equally unquestioned province of the jury to decide the questions of fact. Whether the party undertaken for, was originally liable at all upon the contract, is* not always a question of fact, but there are eases in which it is a question of law to be decided by the court. As in Buckmyer vs. Darnall, before cited, which was an action against Darnall on his undertaking, that if the plaintiff would hire a horse to one English, English would redeliver him.

There the point of inquiry was, not to whom the credit was given, but whether by operation of law English was liable on the contract; or whether, if liable at all, it was not a liability growing out of a subsequent wrong, as the converting the horse to his own use, which was a mere question of law. And the court being of opinion, that English was liable to an action of detinue, on his implied promise upon the bailment to redeliver *399the horse, it; ivas determined, the delivery, the implied contract for redelivery arising upon the act of delivery, and the undertaking by Darnall, being all coincident in point of time, and constituting one entire transaction, that the promise of Darnall was collateral.

But here the point of inquiry at the trial was, to whom the credit was given? Which was purely a question or inference of fact from the evidence, to be found by the jury, upon which the legal responsibility of the appellant on hi3 promise depended.

The court, therefore, did right in refusing to give the direction prayed; which if they had done would have been to decid© -the fact, that the credit was given to Berrett, and to take from the jury a question which it was their province to decide, on a consideration of all the circumstances of the case.

Much stress has been laid on the circumstance that Berrett was debited on the books of the plaintiff, as tending to show that the credit was given to him. But however strong it may be supposed, it was only a circumstance to be submitted, with all the other evidence in the cause, to the jury — as in Anderson vs. Hayman, 1 H. Blk. 120, which is very similar to this case.

With the finding of the jury, whether right or wrong on the evidence, we have nothing to do, the case is not before us on a motion to set aside the verdict. The question, which we arc Bailed upon to decide, is whether it was a matter fit to be left •to the jury? And we think it was.

JUDGMENT AFFIRMED.