Gable v. Graybill

1 Pa. Super. 29, 1895 Pa. Super. LEXIS 8
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 9, 1895
DocketAppeal No. 15
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1 Pa. Super. 29 (Gable v. Graybill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gable v. Graybill, 1 Pa. Super. 29, 1895 Pa. Super. LEXIS 8 (Pa. Ct. App. 1895).

Opinion

Opinion by

Rice, P. J.,

The question whether the defendant’s promise is within our statute of frauds (section 1, act of April 26, 1855, P. L. 308) cannot be determined by the words alone in which it was made. There are cases where the words, “ I -will see you paid,” have been construed, in the light of the pertinent facts, to be an original undertaking, and other cases where the same words have been construed to be a collateral undertaking and within the statute. There is no irreconcilable conflict between these cases. The words are not unimportant in ascertaining the intent, as is shown by the illustration quoted from Nelson v. Boynton, 44 Mass. 396-400, by the present chief justice, in Nugent v. Wolfe, 111 Pa. 471; but the circumstances of the transaction, and not the words alone, determine whether the promise is within the statute. Nor is the fact that there was a consideration for the promise decisive. “ A new consideration for a new promise is indispensable without the statute; and if a new consideration is all that is needed to give validity to a promise to pay the debt of another, the statute amounts to nothing: ” Strong, J., in Maul v. Bucknell, 50 Pa. 39. There are instances, it is true, where the consideration is of importance, as, for example, where it is either a transfer to the promisor of the creditor’s claim, [32]*32making the transaction a purchase, or where it is a transfer to the promisor of a fund for the payment of the debt, or property or securities charged with its payment. This principle was applied in Fehlinger v. Wood, 134 Pa. 517, a case cited by the plaintiff’s counsel, and in other cases that might be cited, but it has no application here. “ The question whether each particular case comes within the clause of the statute or not depends not on the consideration for the promise, but on the fact of the original party remaining liable, coupled with the absence of any liability on the part of the defendant, except such as arises from his express promise:” Forth v. Stanton, Wm. Saunders, 211, note. The doctrine of this note has been quoted with approval in very many cases, and some of them late ones: Nugent v. Wolfe, 111 Pa. 471; Riegelman v. Focht, 141 Pa. 380. In Maul v. Bucknell, supra, Mr. Justice Strong said: “It is incumbent, then, upon him who would enforce a mere verbal promise of one to answer for the debt or default of another, if the original debt remains, to show that his case is one of those that are recognized as exceptional. And it will be found, after examination, that, in nearly all the decisions in which it has been held that such a promise is not within the statute, there was some liability of the promisor or his property independent of his express promise, or that he had become the actual debtor, so as that, between him and the original debtor, the superior liability was his. In such cases the consideration for the new promise is regarded as material.” If, therefore, a third person should say to an employee of another, “ Keep on with your work, and I will see you paid,” the language, without more, would, in ordinary meaning, as well as in legal effect, constitute a promise to see that the principal performed his obligation, and not being in writing would be within the statute. The case of Lewis v. Lumber Manf. Co., 156 Pa. 217, and Haverly v. Mercur, 78 Pa. 257, are in point, and the case of Riegelman v. Focht is analogous. That the present case does not differ in essential particulars can be best shown by a brief recapitulation of the facts.

The plaintiff and William Burke were working in the cigar factory of Allen Kutz. The defendant had advanced the money to Kutz to go into business, and was surety on his United States revenue bond. There was evidence that Kutz neglected his [33]*33business, and early on Saturday morning left his home. On the following Monday morning the workmen wanted money. Kutz had not returned. Mrs. Kutz went to see the defendant, and shortly afterwards he came to the shop. The testimony of Burke as to what occurred in the shop is as follows: “ One morning I came to the shop to work, and Mrs. ICutz told me Al. had put on three white shirts and gone away, and she did not know where till he came back; I told her I needed some money, and she went down to Graybill’s, and after she came back, Graybill came up to the shop and said, if we wanted to keep on working, he would see that we got paid; that he and Mrs. Kutz were going to run the business. Q. Repeat that again — what occurred? A. He came in the shop and said, if we wanted to keep on working, he will see that.we get paid; he was going to take everything out of Al.’s hands, and him and Mrs. Kutz were going to run the business.” The defendant denies having made the alleged- promise, but as the court gave binding instructions to find for the defendant, the question before us is as to the validity of the promise, if he made it. As a matter of fact, the business was not taken out of Kutz’s'hands. He returned on the same day, according to the testimony introduced by the defendant, and certainly within a very,few days, according to that of the plaintiff, and from that time on the business appears to have been conducted as before. The execution which the defendant issued was not pressed, and after a very careful examination, we feel warranted in saying that there is no evidence from which a jury could properly find that the defendant had any interest in the business or its proceeds, except as a creditor of Kutz, or took any control of it. About a year after the alleged promise, the plaintiff left the employ of' Kutz, and nearly six years.after that brought, this- suit before a.justice of the peace, against “Allen Kutz as principal and Herman Graybill as security of Allen Kutz,” to recover án un-i paid balance of wages earned while thus in the employ óf Kutz; After the case was appealed, the record was amended and a statement was filed. It is a significant fac't that Kutz on.sev-i eral occasions paid the plaintiff on accOunt of his.wages; .that the latter made no demand on the defendant until about the time he brought suit, and that, in the meantime,, he. paid the [34]*34defendant money from time, to time on account of lumber and coal bought from him.

Inasmuch as the allowance of the amendment is not complained of, it is perhaps of no importance that the suit was originally brought against the defendant as surety. But the other facts may be referred to properly, because they tend to show (1) the construction which the plaintiff put upon the alleged agreement — a construction inconsistent with his present claim that the defendant became the principal debtor; (2) that there was no change in the relation of employer and employee existing between Kutz and the plaintiff. The plaintiff continued to work, not only in Kutz’s shop, but' for Kutz, and the latter continued to pay him for his services as before. The facts of the case plainly distinguish it from Merriman v. McManus, 102 Pa. 102. There can be no question that Kutz’s liability continued; that, as between him and the defendant, “ the superior liability was his; ” that the plaintiff primarily looked to him for his pay, and only looked to the defendant for that part of his wages which Kutz failed to pay. In the case cited the original contract under which the plaintiff began the work was abandoned, and the only persons interested in the finishing of the work were the defendants, who would receive an immediate tangible benefit thereby. The decision was put upon the ground very distinctly stated by Gordon, J., “ that the defendants agreed to pay for what they got and only for what they got, and that because they would get what they wanted on no other terms.” The case of Jefferson Co.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Pa. Super. 29, 1895 Pa. Super. LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gable-v-graybill-pasuperct-1895.