Tighe v. . Morrison

22 N.E. 164, 116 N.Y. 263, 26 N.Y. St. Rep. 178, 71 Sickels 263, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 1331
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 8, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 22 N.E. 164 (Tighe v. . Morrison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tighe v. . Morrison, 22 N.E. 164, 116 N.Y. 263, 26 N.Y. St. Rep. 178, 71 Sickels 263, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 1331 (N.Y. 1889).

Opinion

Vann, J.

That the plaintiff signed the bond to which the conversation between the parties related cannot be denied by the defendant, as only one paper was spoken of, and at the close of the conversation he handed the undertaking in question to the plaintiff and told him where to sign it. Although, during Ms efforts to persuade the plaintiff to sign, the defendant spoke of Ms paper ” only as if he were to be sole administrator, the instrument, in fact, signed by the plaintiff, and which he had the right to presume was the one to which the guaranty related, provided for a faithful discharge of the trust by Dowdall also. The agreement of the defendant, therefore, as the jury is presumed to have found, was to indemnify the plaintiff against loss and to see Mm safe ” or hold him harmless if he signed the bond now under consideration. As the direct result of signing said bond, the plaintiff has been compelled to pay the amount involved in this action.

The defendant, when called upon to perform Ms agreement to indemnify, insists that it is a special promise to answer for the debt, default or miscarriage of another person, and that it is void by the statute of frauds because not in writing and subscribed by him as the person to be charged.

In order to attain a position which he represented would be of pecuniary value to himself, the defendant promised to indemnify the plaintiff against the consequences of an act necessary to enable him to enjoy said position. One of those consequences was his own possible default, and another was the possible default of Dowdall. Within all of the authorities the promise was clearly original as to the former, but it is contended that it was collateral as to the latter. This con *268 tention involves the assumption that a promise by the defendant to answer for the future default of himself and another is partly within and partly without the statute. Is this possible when there was but a single promise, the sole object of which was to enable the promisor to accomplish a purpose of his own ? Is not the promise to be interpreted with reference to its object and the defendant to be regarded as contracting for himself only, even if the effect includes another ? The promise was in form upon his own account. He asked the plaintiff to sign “ his paper,” • and agreed to indemnify him if he did so. Shortly afterward, handing him a paper, he told him where to sign it. If the plaintiff then knew the extent of the liability he was incurring, the promise of the defendant was impliedly modified by that and other circumstances, so as to include the paper actually signed; but was it in spirit any the less the defendant’s paper, so far as the point under consideration is concerned. Moreover, so far as appears, the consideration for the promise moved to the defendant only. In effect he said to the plaintiff: In consideration of that which is an advantage to me, I promise to protect you from loss if you sign my paper, and here it is and there is the place for your signature.”

He did not promise to pay the plaintiff if Dowdall did not pay him, but, in substance, to pay him if in consequence of Dowdall’s failure to observe the condition of the bond, plaintiff should have to respond to the People. This seems to us an original promise. It was legally beneficial to the defendant only, because Dowdall did not request the plaintiff to sign, and hence was under no legal obligation to the plaintiff when he did sign. There was no liability from Dowdall to the plaintiff until years later, when by the default of the former the latter was compelled to pay. (Leonard v. Vredenburgh, 8 Johns. 29, 39; Mallory v. Gillett, 21 N. Y. 412; Prime v. Koehler, 11 id. 91; Smart v. Smart, 91 id. 559 ; White v. Rintoul, 108 id. 222.) The able argument of the learned counsel for the defendant seems based upon the theory that the promise in question is severable in its nature, *269 and that while it is good as to any default of defendant, it is bad as to the default of Dowdall.

Upon this assumption the interesting and somewhat doubtful question is involved, whether a promise to indemnify the promisee against a liability to be incurred by him at the request of the- promisor only, and for his benefit, as surety for the- fulfillment of a third person’s engagement to a fourth, is within the statute. The decisions upon this question are at variance. A review of the authorities applicable is no longer practicable owing to their number. Many of them have been carefully collated and analyzed by a recent writer, who, after a thorough consideration of the subject, concludes that the weight of authority is in favor of the doctrine that such an agreement is not affected by the statute. (Throop’s Validity of Verbal Agreements, §§ 438-474.) Our examination of the authorities has led us to the same conclusion, and careful study of the statute has convinced us that this result is sustained by the weight of argument also.

By the section in question every special promise to answer for the debt, default or miscarriage of another person is required to be in writing. (4 R. S. [8th ed.] 2590, § 2.) An analysis of the statute shows that it contemplates two concurrent liabilities, first, that of the person who makes the “ special promise,” and, secondly, that of “ another person,” or the one for whose debt, default or miscarriage ” the special promise is made. The one arises only out of the special promise itself, while the other may spring from any business transaction.

Were there two concurrent liabilities in the case under consideration % There was the liability of the defendant, the “special” promisor, to the plaintiff, the promisee, but there was no liability on the part of Dowdall, the third person, to the promisee, at the time the promise was made or when the bond was executed. Dowdall, as already suggested, was under no legal obligation to the plaintiff until by his default he had compelled him to pay the bond, and then his liability arose not out of any promise on his part, but sprang by operation of law from the fact of payment only.

*270 It is probable, yet not certain, that Dowdall assented that the plaintiff should become his surety, but, as was said in Holmes v. Knights (10 N. H. 175,178), “mere assent, without any request or promise, and when there was a request by ” the defendant, “ and an express promise by him to indemnify, is not sufficient to raise an implied promise.” ' It distinctly appears that the defendant did, and that Dowdall did not, request the plaintiff to become surety. It is of no importance that the act of the plaintiff resulted in a benefit to Dowdall, provided the promise was not collateral to any liability of the latter to the former. The obligation arising from payment was, of course, subsequent to the engagement of the defendant, but the person undertaken for must be or become liable at the time the promise is made. Where the promise does not relate to a precedent liability of the third person, the question whether it is original or collateral depends upon whether the third person incurred any liability concurrently with the promisor.

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Bluebook (online)
22 N.E. 164, 116 N.Y. 263, 26 N.Y. St. Rep. 178, 71 Sickels 263, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 1331, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tighe-v-morrison-ny-1889.