Sweatman v. Parker

49 Miss. 19
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 49 Miss. 19 (Sweatman v. Parker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sweatman v. Parker, 49 Miss. 19 (Mich. 1873).

Opinion

Peyton, O. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court:

William Cunningham was indebted to James H. Parker in the sum of $1011.25, and it was agreed between said Parker, Cunningham and William F. Brantly, that Cunningham should cause to be transferred to Brantley certain promissory notes, belonging to him, to. the amount of $4000, and in consideration thereof the said Brantley promised to pay to said Parker the debt due him by said Cunningham, as aforesaid; and in pursuance of said agreement the said notes belonging to said Cunningham were transferred to said Brantly.

Upon this promise of Brandy to pay the debt of Cunningham, an action of assumpsit was brought in the circuit court of Montgomery county, against David L. Sweatman, as executor of the last will and testament of William F. Brantly, deceased, by James H. Parker, to recover the amount due him as aforesaid by said Cunningham.

To this action the defendant pleaded the general issue, non assumpsit, and three special pleas in bar, alleging, substantially, that the promise of his testator to pay the debt of Cunningham to the plaintiff was not in writing, as required by the statute of frauds, and is therefore void. To these special pleas the plaintiff interposed a demurrer, which was sustained by the court, and the defendant declining to answer over to the declaration, the cause was submitte.d to the jury upon the general issue, who found for the plaintiff and assessed his damages at $1011.25, whereupon a motion was made for a new trial, which was overruled by the court, and judgment rendered on the verdict. From this judgment the defendant brings the case here, by writ of error, and makes the following assignments of error :

1. That the court below erred in sustaining the plaintiff’s demurrer to defendant’s special pleas.

2. The court erred in giving instructions asked for the plaintiff, and in refusing those asked for defendant.

3. The court erred in allowing Cunningham to testify for the plaintiff.

[27]*27The first and second assignments of error will be considered together, as they raise the important question, whether, under the facts of this case, the promise on which the action was founded, was an original promise or a collateral promise ? The first is out of the statute; the latter is not, when it is to pay the debt of another, already contracted.

The fourth section of the English statute of frauds' has generally been re-enacted in this country. And although it is difficult, perhaps impossible, to reconcile all the decisions on the construction of that section of the statute as to what is an original and what a collateral undertaking, the strong current of the authorities is, that if the party to whom the consideration moves becomes personally liable for the payment of the debt, the engagement of any other person, though made at the same time and upon the same consideration, is a collateral undertaking to pay the debt of another within the statute. 1 Smith’s Leading cases, 381, American notes.

The principle laid down in the case of Leonard v. Vredenburgh, 8 John., 39, is this: Where the promise to pay the debt of another arises out of some new and original consideration of benefit or harm moving between the newly contracting parties, it is an original undertaking, and not a case within the statute. And Roberts on Frauds, 232, lays down the doctrine to be that the statute does not apply, if the consideration “ springs out of any new transaction, or moves to the party promising upon some fresh and substantive grounds of personal concern to himself.” In such case, there. is no doubt that a good and valid promise may be made by parol, and it is independent of the statute.

That clause of the statute which relates to a promise “ to answer for the debt, default or miscarriage of another person,” covers all guaranties, and is of great importance in reference to them. The distinction between those which are collateral and those which are original has already been considered; and it is sufficient to say, in this connection, [28]*28that only when the promise is distinctly collateral, is it within this clause of the statute. Nor is it then material whether the promise is made before or after the delivery of the goods.

• From the very definition of a collateral promise, it follows that there must be some one who owes the- debt directly. There must exist' an original liability. And one of these liabilities must be entirely distinct from the other. It has been repeatedly decided, that the sort of promise which the statute means, and which must be reduced to writing, is a promise to answer for the debt, default or miscarriage of another person, for which that other person himself continues liable. But it was at one time thought that a verbal promise, even to answer for the debt of another for which that other remained liable, might be available, if founded on an entirely new consideration conferring a distinct benefit upon the party making such promise. This idea is, however, confuted by Sergt. Williams in his elaborate note t‘o the case of Forth v. Stanton, 1 Saunders, 211. The rule there laid down by him, which has ever since been approved of, is, that the only test and criterion by which to determine whether the promise needs to be in writing, is the question, whether it is or is not a promise to answer for a debt, default .or miscarriage of another, for which that other continues liable. If it be so, it must be reduced into writing; nor can the consideration in any case be of importance except in cases in which the consideration to the person giving the promise is something which extinguishes the original debtor’s liability. Smith on Contracts, 92, 5th ed.

But acting upon the general rule as stated by Boberts and Kent some of the American courts have held, that wherever there was a'new consideration, distinct from that which supported the original debtor’s liability, and moving between the parties to the guaranty, the defendant’s promise was saved from the operation of the statute. However respectable the countenance it has received, this doctrine, if unqualified, must be repudiated as not based upon authority, [29]*29and as, to a great degree, nullifying the statute. And it may also be fairly said that the better opinion of courts and of commentators is now leaning against it. Mr. Browne, in his valuable Treatise on the Statute of Frauds, 217, upon a careful examination of all the cases upon the subject, has arrived at the conclusion that the proper limitation of the rule is this : That wherever the transaction between the parties is such that the primary and distinctive obligation assumed by the defendant is different from that of a guarantor, although as incidental to, and in course of, the discharge of that obligation, the debt of another is satisfied, the defendant’s promise is not within the statute. In order to make the statute applicable, the immediate object for requiring the defendant’s liability must be that he shall pay the debt of another, if that other does not, and thus there must appear a guaranty of the debt. Smith on contracts, 92.

The following cases, in which it was held that, where there was a new and original consideration, moving to the party making the promise, either from the plaintiff or the original debtor, the subsisting liability of the original debtor is no objection to the recovery, are cases falling within the rule as above laid down by Mr. Browne. Farley v. Cleaveland, 4 Cowen, 432; Olmstead v. Greenly, 18 John., 12, 17 John., 115, and Cleaveland v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
49 Miss. 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sweatman-v-parker-miss-1873.