The first question to be determined in this case is, whether the promise made by Blunt to pay the debt due to the plaintiff from Rowley was void by the statute of frauds. The statute now declares every special promise to answer for the debt, default, or miscarriage of another person, void, unless such agreement, or some note or memorandum thereof expressing the consideration, be in writing and subscribed by the party to be charged therewith. In the recent case of Barker v. Buckling (2 Denio, 45,) Mr. Justice Jewett has reviewed, with great care and ability, the cases bearing upon this point. The distinction is there fully recognized between a promise to pay one’s
If this case rested alone on the testimony of Mr. Pruyn, it would be clearly within the statute of frauds; for he proves nothing more than a promise made to the plaintiff’s agent, to pay the debt of a third person, without consideration, and by parol. Mr. Pruyn was requested to call on the defendant in relation to the payment of the plaintiff's demand for lumber sold to Mr. Rowley ; and it was that debt which the defendant promised he would pay, on a certain condition. It was not a promise to pay to the plaintiff the debt which the defendant owed Rowley. It does not appear that any such promise was ever made by the defendant to the plaintiff, or to his agent. Mr. Pruyn also testified that the defendant promised to pay the draft, deducting the $9. It will not be claimed that this was such an acceptance of the draft as would bind the defendant. No person can be charged as acceptor, unless his acceptance is in writing and signed by himself or his agent. (1 R. S. 768.) This case, then, must rest upon the facts that occurred at the settlement between Rowley and the defendant. It was then found that the defendant owed Rowley, for his labor, $150, and the defendant gave his note to Rowley for all except $87, and agreed with Rowley to pay that sum to the plaintiff. Here was no privity of contract between the plaintiff and the defendant. No new consideration passed from Rowley to the defendant. Rowley left $87 of his demand unpaid, and the defendant promised Rowley he would pay that sum to the plaintiff. In Barker v. Bucklin, above cited, B. being indebted to the plaintiff sold property to the defendant, on his agreeing to pay the price of it to the plaintiff, on account of his demand
An examination of the conflicting cases in which suits have been brought by a person not a party to the contract, but for whose benefit the contract was made, will show that the question whether the defendant had received money or property as a consideration for the promise, has in general been regarded as the controlling circumstance. These cases are collected and compared in Barker v. Bucklin. In Farley v. Cleveland, (4 Cowen’s Rep. 432,) Moon was indebted to the plaintiff in the sum of $100, for which the plaintiff held his promissory note. After the maturity of the note Moon sold and delivered to the defendant, Cleveland, a quantity of hay worth $150, in consideration of which Cleveland promised to pay the amount due on Moon’s note. The plaintiff was nonsuited in the common pleas, on the ground that the promise was void within the statute of frauds, but the supreme court reversed the judgment of the court of common pleas. In giving the opinion, Savage, Ch. J. said: “ In all these cases, founded upon a new and ori
In all cases there must be a new and distinct consideration for the promise, moving to the defendant, either from the plaintiff or from the party indebted to the plaintiff. Such a consideration is wanting in this case. Indeed the proof shows no consideration for the promise sought to be enforced. If Boyd gave credit to Rowley for the amount of the draft, on receiving it, he would of course charge it to him again, on the defendant’s refusing to pay or accept it, or else avail himself of Rowley’s liability on the draft. There was never any discharge of the indebtedness from Rowley to Boyd, nor of that from the defendant to Rowley.
The whole case rests upon a naked promise from the defendant to Rowley, made without consideration, that he would pay to the plaintiff a debt that Rowley owed to the plaintiff. And there is no view of the case in which the action can be sustained. It is clearly not a case in which the demand of Rowley can be assigned to the plaintiff, so as to be sued in his name.
The judgment of the Albany mayor’s court must therefore be reversed, with costs.