The principal, and perhaps the only question, which can be considered as fairly arising upon the bill of exceptions in this case, relates to the instructions given to the jury concerning the statute of frauds, so far as its provisions are applicable to the contract set forth in the declaration, and the evidence by which it was attempted to be proved at the trial. No action can be brought to charge any person upon a mere oral promise, of which no written note or memorandum has been made, to answer for the debt, default or misdoings of another. Rev. Sts. c. 74, § 1. If, therefore, the agreement of the defendant was simply to answer for or to pay the debt which was due from Hamblin to the plaintiff, it,was a contract which the provisions of the statute will not permit to be enforced. But if, for a good and sufficient consideration, the defendant assumed and took upon himself the debt which Hamblin had before owed to the plaintiff, and promised to pay it, and Hamblin was thereby, and as a part of the agreement between the parties, released and discharged from all liability upon his note, then the promise of the defendant was a promise to pay his own debt, and not the debt of another person, and an action at law may well be maintained upon it.
The instructions given to the jury appear to us to recognize and to have been framed substantially in accordance with this *236distinction. They are not very plainly or accurately stated in the bill of exceptions; but the import and meaning of them, we think, cannot be mistaken. The jury were, in substance and effect, advised that the sufficiency of the defence depended upon the decision first to be made upon the question whether the promise of the defendant was a mere collateral undertaking to pay the debt of another person, or constituted one part of a new, original and independent contract between the parties; and that if, in pursuance of their mutual agreement, the indebtedness of Hamblin upon his promissory note to the plaintiff was cancelled, released and extinguished, and the defendant, for a good consideration, such as some loss or disadvantage submitted to by the plaintiff therefrom, promised the plaintiff to pay him the amount of said note, this would be a contract not within or affected by the statute of frauds. The precise language of the presiding judge was, that it would be “ a good consideration, not within the statute; ” but considering the connection in which that word is used, and the explanation of which it is a part, it is obvious that he was defining what he had just before spoken of as a new and original contract. Taking this view of the instructions, we think the law was properly stated and explained to the jury, and that there is no ground for the exceptions taken by the defendant.
It has been urged further, as a cause for setting aside the verdict, that there is a substantial variance between the allegation in the declaration, and the evidence given upon the trial in support of it; that the contract set forth in the declaration is absolute in its terms, while that which was proved was conditional. This is substantially a motion to this court to interpose and set aside the verdict because the verdict is against the evidence, a course of proceeding which is not admissible upon a bill of exceptions. Exceptions are to be allowed whenever a party is aggrieved by any opinion, direction or judgment of the court in matter of law ; but not when he conceives that the jury have misapplied or have erroneously given an unjust or inadmissible effect to the evidence. Rev. Sts. c. 82, § 12.
There are other answers, however, to this objection, which, if *237it were necessary to resort to them, would seem to be quite decisive against it. The whole evidence which was submitted to the jury is not now before this court; for the bill of exceptions, after reciting a portion, and, it may be, the least material part, of that which was introduced upon the trial, adds, that (t there was other evidence in the case, which the defendant and plaintiff respectively relied on to maintain the issues raised.” It is impossible, therefore, for the court here to see that the jury erroneously found that the allegations of the declaration were proved by the evidence laid before them; it does not possess all the means which are indispensable to the formation of an opinion upon the subject. But further, in looking at the part of the evidence which is reported, it appears to us to have a very strong tendency to establish the proposition which the plaintiff attempted to maintain; and we are not prepared to say that it was not fully sufficient to support it. Exceptions overruled.