Court Opinion

ID: 6962750
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 01:48:25.626328+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:08:29.762835
License: Public Domain

Mr. Justice Craig delivered the opinion of the Court: This was an action of assumpsit, brought by William L. Bankin, against James E. Power, to recover $1000, which it is alleged Power agreed to pay in consideration that Bankin would permit certain corn, upon which he held a mortgage, to be delivered to a certain person to whom the corn had been sold by Mrs. Glasscock. Bankin recovered a judgment in the circuit court for the amount claimed, and that judgment was affirmed in the Appellate Court. After the plaintiff had concluded his evidence, the defendant entered a motion to exclude the evidence from the jury. The court overruled the motion, and this decision of the court is relied upon as error. The main ground relied upon in support of the motion is, that the admitted evidence established merely a verbal promise to pay the debt of another, and was therefore void under the Statute of Frauds. We do not concur in the view taken by appellant’s counsel. As we understand the testimony, in the fall of 1881 Mrs. Glasscock was indebted to Bankin on a certain note for $1249, bearing date November 16,1881, and due October 1, 1882. The payment of the note was secured by a chattel mortgage on a crop of corn raised that season. In the summer of 1882, Mrs. Glasscock contracted the corn to Ulrich, who gave Power a check for $1000, which he was to hold until one thousand dollars’ worth of the corn should be delivered, when ther money was to be paid to Mrs. Glass-cock, or her order. After the check was placed in the hands of Power, and before any of the corn was delivered, Bankin and Power met at the office of Mr. Sales, and Bankin refused to allow the corn to be delivered unless the money in the hands of Power should be applied on his mortgage indebtedness. After discussing the matter for some time, Power finally agreed if Bankin would permit the corn to be delivered to Ulrich, he would apply the money in his hands in payment of the note and mortgage held by Bankin. This arrangement was made, according to the testimony of Sales, about the first of August, 1882. A parol promise to pay the debt of another is rendered void by the Statute of Frauds, and an action can not be enforced upon such a promise. There is no room for doubt as to the general rule on this subject. In Scott v. Thomas, 1 Scam. 58, it was held that where the moving consideration for the promise is the liability of a third person, there the promise must be in writing; but if there is a new consideration moving from the promisee to the promisor, there the superadded consideration makes it a new agreement, which is not within the statute. In Borchsenius v. Canutson, 100 Ill. 82, where the plaintiff had relinquished a lien or given up a security for a debt in consideration of a promise by a third party to pay the debt, the promise was held to be an original undertaking, and not affected by the Statute of Frauds. Here Bankin had a lien on the corn for the payment of his debt, which he relinquished, and allowed the corn to be sold, upon the promise of Power that the money ($1000) which he held in his hands should be paid to him. A promise of this character, under the rule established by the authorities, is an original undertaking, and in no manner affected by the Statute of Frauds. Such being the case, the evidence was properly admitted, and the court did right in overruling the motion to exclude the evidence from the jury. But it is said in the argument that Rankin had no mortgage at the time Power promised to pay the money to him, and hence no lien was waived, or security given up, on the faith of the promise. This is a clear misapprehension of the evidence bearing upon this branch of the ease. It is true that Rankin fixed the date of the promise made by Power to him, in September or October, 1881; but this was a mistake as to the date. The corn sold was the crop of 1881, but it was not delivered • until August, 1882, and Sales, ivho was present and heard the arrangement made between Rankin and Power, testified that it occurred “about the beginning of the delivery of the corn, ■* * * from the 1st to the 11th of August, 1882.” If there had been no evidence as to the date of the agreement except Rankin’s testimony, there might be much force in appellant’s position on this question; but the evidence of Sales places the date of the agreement beyond question, and at a time when the mortgage lien was in full force and effect. Objection is made to an instruction given by the court in behalf of the plaintiff. We have examined the instruction, and while there may be objections of a technical character urged against it, yet so far as the law involved in the case is concerned, the instruction lays down a correct proposition of law. It is also contended that the court erred in refusing one of defendant’s instructions. The instruction refused may announce a correct proposition of law, and might, under a different state of facts, be proper; but as we understand the record, there was no evidence upon which it could properly be based, and under such circumstances it was the duty of the court to refuse it. It is also objected that a recovery could not be had under the common counts. Where the promise sued upon is a collateral undertaking, then the declaration is required to be special; but where the promise, as here, is regarded as an original undertaking, a recovery may be had under the common counts. Runde v. Runde, 59 Ill. 98, is an authority in point on this question. The judgment of the Appellate Court will be affirmed. Judgment affirmed.