Davis v. Patrick (141 U.S. 479)/Opinion of the Court

That Davis was interested in having the ore transported to the furnaces is clear. He was interested in two respects: First, as to the 4,995 tons to be delivered to him at the ore-house, it being his property when thus delivered, any subsequent handling was wholly for his benefit; and in respect to the balance, as the transportation was one step in the process of converting the product of the mine into money, it would help to pay the debt of the company to him. Davis, therefore, was so pecuniarily interested in, and so much to be benefited by, the prompt and successful transportation of the ore, that any contract which he might enter into in reference to it was supported by abundant consideration. We proceed, therefore, to inquire what he said and did. After the execution of the papers, the newly-appointed manager took possession of the mine; and in the forepart of 1874 the plaintiff commenced the transportation of the ore under a contract with the agent of the manager. The business was carried on in the name of the mining company. The plaintiff understood that Davis was interested in the matter, though not informed as to the extent of the interest, or the terms of the agreement between him and the mining company. In the fall of 1874, Davis came to Utah to examine the property. He was introduced by the manager to the foreman of plaintiff, in the latter's presence, as the boss of the mine, to which Davis assented. After this, plaintiff, who had not received his pay in full for the services already rendered, bad an account made up showing the balance due him, and presented it to Davis. His testimony as to the conversation which followed is in these words: 'I showed it to Mr. Davis, and told him I was not getting my money, and Mr. Davis said my account was all right, and he would be personally responsible to me for the money, and for me to go on as I had been doing, and draw as little money as I could get along with to pay the men and the running expenses, and he would see that I got every dollar of my money.' The plaintiff's cashier, who was present at this conversation, gives this as his recollection of the conversation: 'QUESTION. IN THAT CONVERSATION STATE WHat Mr. davis sAid about being responsible to A. S. Patrick for that account. Answer. He stated to Mr. Patrick, in my presence, that he would personally be responsible for that account. He says: 'You know, Al., I practically own this mine, but money is scarce, and we must get what we can out of the mine.' He says, 'We are making large expenditures for improvements;' and he says, 'You shall have all the money you want to pay your men and expenses, but you must wait for the balance, and I will see that you are paid.' Q. What did he say in that connection to A. S. Patrick about continuing on in the hauling of the ores? A. He requested him to continue in the hauling of the ores. He requested him to do it. Q. In response to Mr. Davis to that request, what did Mr. Patrick say? A. He said to Mr. Davis if he would guaranty him to be paid he would continue to work, and Davis said he would see him paid.'

After this, the plaintiff continued the work of transportation until the fall of 1875, receiving such payments from time to time as to extinguish the amount due him at the date of this conversation, and leaving a balance more than covered by the work done in 1875, and it is only for work done after these promises that this recovery was had, and in respect to which the questions presented and discussed arise. The plaintiff testified to another conversation, in September, 1876, in the city of New York. His account of that conversation is given in these words: 'Plaintiff told Davis that his brother and himself were hard up for money, and wanted to know if Davis would not give them some money on the 'Flagstaff' account for hauling the ores. Plaintiff had his account with him, and showed it to Davis. Davis said the whole of the account was all right, and he proposed to pay the account, and said he would pay the plaintiff. Plaintiff said to Davis that if he would give him some money on the account it would help him out. Davis said he had some securities in London which he was going to sell, and would have some money in a few days, and would give plaintiff $5,000 on the account. Plaintiff said if the money was going to be there in a few days he would wait for it, but Davis said: 'No, you go home, and I will pledge you my word that I will telegraph the money to you to the First National Bank by the 1st of October." And, again, he testified to an interview in 1877 with Davis, in the city of Omaha, in the presence of other parties, in which he said, 'Davis, you promised all along to pay me that money;' and Davis, replied, 'I believe I did.'

This testimony of plaintiff as to conversations with defendant is corroborated by other witnesses, and contradicted by none. It must therefore be accepted as presenting the facts upon which this case must be determined. Were these promises binding upon Davis, or of no avail to the plaintiff, because not in writing? Were it not for the statute of frauds, there would be no question, for obviously there were both promise and consideration. Defendant relies upon that provision of the statute of frauds which forbids the maintenance of an action 'to charge the defendant upon any special promise to answer for the debt, default, or miscarriage of another person, unless the agreement upon which such action shall be brought, or some memorandum or note thereof, shall be in writing,' ect. The purpose of this provision was not to effectuate, but to prevent, wrong. It does not apply to promises in respect to debts created at the instance and for the benefit of the promisor, but only to those by which the debt of one party is sought to be charged upon and collected from another. The reason of the statute is obvious, for in the one case, if there be any conflict between the parties as to the exact terms of the promise, the courts can see that justice is done by charging against the promisor the reasonable value of that in respect to which the promise was made; while in the other case, and when a third party is the real debtor, and the party alone receiving benefit, it is impossible to solve the conflict of memory or testimony in any manner certain to accomplish justice. There is also a temptation for a promisee, in a case where the real debtor has proved insolvent or unable to pay, to enlarge the scope of the promise, or to torture mere words of encouragement and confidence into an absolute promise; and it is so obviously just that a promisor receiving no benefits should be bound only by the exact terms of his promise, that this statute requiring a memorandum in writing was enacted. Therefore, whenever the alleged promisor is an absolute stranger to the transaction, and without interest in it, courts strictly uphold the obligations of this statute. But cases sometimes arise in which, though a third party is the original obligor, the primary debtor, the promisor has a personal, immediate, and pecuniary interest in the transaction, and is therefore himself a party to be benefited by the performance of the promisee. In such cases the reason which underlies and which prompted this statutory provision fails, and the courts will give effect to the promise. As said by this court in Emerson v. Slater, 22 How. 28, 43: 'Whenever the main purpose and object of the promisor is not to answer for another, but to subserve some pecuniary or business purpose of his own, involving either a benefit to himself or damage to the other contracting party, his promise is not within the statute, although it may be in form a promise to pay the debt of another, and although the performance of it may incidentally have the effect of extinguishing that liability.' To this may be added the observation of Brown in his work on the Statute of Frauds, § 165: 'The statute contemplates the mere promise of one man to be responsible for another, and cannot be interposed as a cover and shield against the actual obligations of the defendant himself.' The thought is that there is a marked difference between a promise which, without any interest in the subject-matter of the promise in the promisor, is purely collateral to the obligation of a third party, and that which, though operating upon the debt of a third party, is also and mainly for the benefit of the promisor. The case before us is in the latter category. While the original promisor was the mining company, and the undertaking was for its benefit, yet the performance of the contract inured equally to the benefit of Davis and the mining company. Performance helped the mining company in the payment of its debt to Davis, and at the same time helped Davis to secure the payment of the mining company's debt to him; and as the mining company was apparently destitute of any other property, and the payment of its debt to Davis, therefore, depended upon the continued and successful working of this mine, and as the control and working of the mine had been put in the hands of Davis so that he might justly say, as he did, 'I am practically the owner,' it follows that he was a real, substantial party in interest in the performance of this contract. His promise was not one purely collateral to sustain the obligations of the mining company, but substantially a direct and personal one to advance his own interests. While the mining company was ultimately to be benefited, Davis was primarily to be benefited by the transportation of the ore, for thereby that debt, which otherwise could not, would be paid to him. He therefore, in any true sense of the term occupied not the position of a collateral undertaker, but that of an original promisor, and it would be a shadow on justice if the administration of the law relieved him from the burden of his promise on the ground that it also resulted to the benefit of the mining company, his debtor.

Counsel for Davis place stress on the form of expression attributed by Patrick to Davis, to-wit: 'I will be personally responsible; I will see you paid;' and contends that the import of such language is that of a collateral promise. There is force in this contention, as it implies that some one else was also bound, but the real character of a promise does not depend altogether upon the form of expression, but largely on the situation of the parties; and the question always is, what the parties mutually understood by the language,-whether they understood it to be a collateral or a direct promise. Patrick declares he understood it to be a direct promise, and acted on the faith of it. That Davis understood it in the same way is evidenced, not only from the circumstances surrounding the parties at the time, but from the fact that in a subsequent interview, when charged to have always promised to pay this debt, he admits that he believes that he did. The plaintiff, believing that Davis was, as he said, practically the owner,-the party primarily to be benefited by the conversion of the products of the mine into money,-understood that Davis was making an original promise to pay for the work, which he might do, and upon such promise he might surely rely as an original promise, at least for any work done thereafter. The merits of the case, therefore, as disclosed by the testimony, were with Patrick, and the judgment in his favor was right. It is objected that the court in its instruction spoke of Davis as an original promisor, as one promising to pay the debt, and not as one promising to be responsible for the debt, or to see it paid. But as Davis in the second conversation promised to pay, and in the third admitted that he had always promised to pay, the debt, we cannot think that the court misinterpreted the scope and effect of his words. It is not probable that the parties to this transaction understood the difference between an original and a collateral promise. We must interpret Davis' promises in the light of the surroundings, and of his subsequent admissions, and in that light we cannot think that the court erred in its construction thereof; and if the jury believed that he had made such promises, we cannot doubt that the verdict should have been as it was.

It is also objected that the court erred in not directing a verdict for defendant upon the ground of a departure from the allegations of the petition. That counts on an original employment by Davis, in 1873, while the testimony shows that the original employment was by the mining company, and that the promise of Davis was made in the fall of 1874, and after Patrick had been at work for months for the mining company. As no objection was made to the admission of testimony on this ground, and as an amendment of the petition to correspond to the proof would involve but a trifling change, we cannot see that there was any error in the ruling of the court. If objection had been made in the first instance, doubtless the court would, as it ought to have done, have permitted an amendment of the petition. There was no surprise, for the facts were fully developed in the former trial. Upon the record as presented, we think that the verdict and judgment were right, and, as no substantial error appears in the proceedings, the judgment is affirmed.

The Chief Justice and BRADLEY and GRAY, JJ., did not hear the argument or take part in the decision of this case.