Court Opinion

ID: 4931019
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-09-24 01:07:37.514819+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:14:28.309063
License: Public Domain

*473The opinion of the Court was drawn up by
May, J.
That the plaintiff, and one Willard Hall, became the assignees of Elmes & Tebbets, under an assignment made for the benefit of their creditors, June 3, 1857, is not denied. They also received the assets of said firm, and gave their joint bond with sureties to the Judge of Probate as the statute requires. It is now contended that said assignment was invalid, because the evidence in this case does not show a subsequent compliance with the provisions of the statute in relation thereto, passed March 21, 1844, c. 122, § 3, and that, the assignment being void, the plaintiff cannot maintain this action upon the promise alleged in his writ. How the invalidity of the assignment, and the proceedings under the same, can possibly invalidate such promise, if otherwise binding, we fail to perceive. The plaintiff and Hall having received the property upon which the assignment was intended to act, they became jointly liable in some mode and to somebody therefor; and equally so whether the assignment should prove to be valid or invalid. If invalid, their joint liability for the assets received would be to Elmes & Tebbetts, and, if valid, to such of their creditors as became parties thereto. The plaintiff and Hall being therefore liable, each for the other, in any event, it was lawful for either to secure the other against such liability, in .any mode not in conflict with the principles and requirements of the law.
In this case the jury must have found that Hall, having received a certain amount of money from the assets of Elmes & Tebbetts, and the same being held by him or by the firm of Hall, Snow & Co., of which he was a member, he being insolvent, undertook to secure the plaintiff against loss on account of the same; and that, for this purpose, he, and the firm of Hall, Snow & Co., put into the hands of the defendant property sufficient to secure the plaintiff against such loss, with the condition that the defendant was to pay the amount which Hall had received, to the plaintiff, that he might thereby be secured against his joint liability with *474Hall therefor; and, further, that the defendant afterwards promised the plaintiff to pay him that amount. The presiding Judge instructed the jury that, if they were satisfied of these facts, and that the defendant, at the time of the promise and as a part of it, requested the plaintiff to wait a short time for payment, and he assented thereto, and did w.ait, this would be a binding contract on sufficient consideration ; and further, that, if Hall told the plaintiff that he would put property into defendant’s hands, and the plaintiff assented to the proposition, before the assignment of Hall, Snow & Co., and the px-operty was put into his hands accordingly, before the assignment, and Hitchcock agreed, at the time of taking it, to pay this debt to the plaintiff, and afterwax'ds promised to pay the plaintiff, as before stated, which the plaintiff assented to, the defendant could not avoid his liability on the ground that the property would pass to the assignees of Hall, Snow & Co., notwithstanding the transfer to the defendaxxt, 'it xxot appearing that the assignees had ever made an inventoxy of, or any claim for the property.
These instx’uctions ax’e sufficiently favorable to the defend■axxt, when considered in the light of the facts alone upon which they are based, and which are referred to therein. The law is now well settled "that where money has been paid by one pex’son to a second, for the benefit of a third, the latter may maintaixx an action against the second for the money.” Bohanan v. Pope & al., 42 Maine, 93, and cases there cited. It is also said in the same case that "where a party for a valuable consideration stipulates with another, by simple contract, to pay money or do some other act for the benefit of a third person, the latter, for whose benefit the promise is made, if there be no other objection to his recovery than a want of privity between the parties, may maintain an action for a breach of such engagement,” and several cases are there cited from both this State and Massachusetts which sustain the proposition. So, too, the cases cited by the plaintiff clearly show that when one person sells *475property to another, and the purchaser agrees to pay certain bills of the vendor to third persons, as part of the consideration, and afterwards promises such third persons to pay the same, he makes himself thereby liable, and his promise is not within the statute of frauds. Maxwell & al. v. Haynes $ al., 41 Maine, 559. The consideration is sufficient, though moving from a third person. The instructions are in harmony with these principles, and were properly given, unless the ease discloses other facts than those referred to by the presiding Judge, as the legal basis thereof.
The question then arises whether the case discloses any facts which called for different instructions, or which would warrant those which were called for by the counsel in defence. The first requested instruction appears to be contained, so far as it could properly have been given, in the instructions which were given. The second and third requested instructions, which were based upon the idea that Hall was to be discharged from his liability, before the plaintiff would have the right to recover the money as security for the payment thereof, and that the defendant’s promise would be without consideration without such discharge, are manifestly erroneous. There are no facts in the case tending to show that such was the intention of any of the parties connected with the transaction. It is much more reasonable to suppose that the parties intended that the money should be paid for the very purpose of enabling the plaintiff to discharge such liability.
But the presiding Judge was further requested to instruct the jury that, if Hall, Snow & Co. made an assignment of their property before the plaintiff assented to the placing of the property in the hands of the defendant, such property would pass by said assignment, and the defendant would not be liable on his promise, if such promise was made. The case shows that the assignment of Hall, Snow & Co. was made April 14, 1858, and that tlje conveyance to the defendant, which consisted partly of their partnership property, and partly of the individual property of Hall, was made *476on the day preceding the assignment, and there was testimony tending to show that the plaintiff consented to such conveyance for his security, before it was made. There is no evidence in the case, that either the plaintiff or defendant then knew that Hall, Snow & Co., or that Hall himself was then contemplating an assignment of their property for the benefit of their creditors. So far as the case shows, they acted in good faith, for the sole purpose of obtaining security for their liabilities. Nor does it appear that the assignees of Hall, Snow & Co., or of either of them, have in any way made claim to the property conveyed to the defendant. It does not appear that the plaintiff had any knowledge of the conveyance to the defendant, at the precise time when it was made; but, in view of the previous arrangement between him and Hall, as testified to by him, and the fact that it was for his benefit, the jury might well find that he assented to it' as soon as it was made; and the fact that the jury were instructed that, if Hall told the plaintiff that he would put property into the hands of the defendant to pay the plaintiff this debt, and the plaintiff assented to this proposition before the assignment of Hall, Snow & Co., and the property was put into his hands accordingly, before the assignment, and Hitchcock agreed, at the time of taking it, to pay this debt to the plaintiff, and afterwards promised the plaintiff to pay it, to which he assented, the defendant could not avoid his liability on the ground that the property would pass to the assignees of Hall, Snow & Co. notwithstanding the conveyance, sufficiently shows that the jury must have found that the plaintiff assented to the placing of the property in the hands of the defendant prior to said assignment, and such fact being found, the basis of this last requested instruction wholly fails, and the defendant cannot have been injured by its being withheld. No question appears to have been raised at the trial, that this conveyance to the defendant was a fraud upon the law, or upon creditors, and no such question is now open to the defendant upon these exceptions.
*477The requested instruction, that this action cannot bo maintained as long as the defendant remains liable upon the bond for the acts or omissions of the plaintiff, as assignee of Elmes & Tebbetts, might properly have been withheld. It is not perceived how his liability upon such bond, in the absence of all proof of any agreement to that effect, could justify the defendant in refusing to perform the binding contract or promise he had made. That the defendant’s request was in fact complied with, subject to the qualification stated by the presiding Judge, affords no ground of complaint.
It further appears that the defendant did not offer himself as a witness, and no evidence was offered to show where he was, nor any reason given why he was not called; which fact was commented upon by the counsel for the plaintiff in his argument to the jury, and, so far as appears, without objection. The presiding Judge, in his charge, remarked to the jury, that it was the privilege of parties to testify in their cases, and it was optional with them to do so; but the fact that the defendant had not testified in the case might properly be considered by them. Objection is now made to this remark, the same having been excepted to at the trial.
It is true that jurors are sworn to decide civil cases according to the evidence given them; but they are at liberty to consider the circumstances under which it is given. The weight which they are to give to testimony often depends very much upon the intelligence and appearance, or feeling, manifested by the witness. Often, too, the degree of credit which shall be given to a witness who undertakes to state the contents of some paper which the defendant is shown to have in his possession, and, upon notice, has refused to produce, will bo much affected by its non-production. In view of such fact, the jury may well conclude, that if the witness has not stated truly, the defendant would produce the paper to contradict him. To permit jurors to draw such inferences as they might deem proper from circumstances of this kind, has almost, if not universally, been held as allowable by the law; and no reason is apparent, where, in a case like *478the present, it appears that one party has testified to facts equally within the knowledge of the other, and the other party does not choose to contradict what has been testified to prejudicial to his case, why the circumstance of his absence or neglect to testify differently, unexplained, may not be considered by the jury in determining what credit they ought to give to the party who has testifiedor, in other words, why they may not consider the testimony before them in the light of the circumstance that it is uncontradicted by the other party, who knows whether it is true or false, and who, if it is false, is legally admissible to -contradict it. Where a witness testifies to facts as having occurred in the presence of other witnesses, or where a witness is attempted to be impeached by showing his general character for truth to be bad, and the party who is to be affected in such case, have had full opportunity to call in the other witnesses who were present when the alleged facts occurred, in the one case, or the friends and neighbors who know the general character of the witness for truth, in the other case, may not the jury consider the evidence in the light of the fact that it is uncontradicted, when it might be easily contradicted by the other party, if it were not true in fact? We think the remarks of the Judge, which were excepted to in this particular, were legally unexceptionable.
In regard to the motion to set aside the verdict, as against the weight of evidence, we see no such preponderance in favor of the defendant as satisfies us that the jury have acted under any gross mistake, or under any passion, bias, or prejudice; and the result is that both the exceptions and motion must be overruled.

Exceptions and motion overtoiled,

and judgment on the verdict.

Tenney, C. J.,.Rice, Cutting and Goodenow, JJ., concurred.
Davis, J., concurred in the result.