Hopkins v. Carr
Hopkins v. Carr
Opinion of the Court
Suit before a justice of the peace by Carr against Hopkins. Appeal by Carr to the court below.
One item in the account filed by Hopkins as a set-off was βfor board bill and feed bill of Daniel Graves and Dempsey Johnson, in the sum of $13.00.β
On the trial in the court below, the defendant offered to testify that in 1861, Carr, Johnson, Jenners, and Graves, who were partners, had a lot of cattle in his pasture; that while the cattle were on pasture Graves and Johnson boarded with, him, to the amount of some seventy dollars; that this.included some feed for cattle; that the item in the answer was.for an unpaid balance of that charge, which the plaintiff promised to pay at a time Carr and defendant had a settlement of their accounts; that Jenners had paid the other portion 'of the seventy dollars. The court ruled out this evidence, on the ground that it was a verbal promise to pay the debt of another, and not binding on the promisor. The ruling out of this testimony was one of the grounds assigned in the written motion for a new trial.
This presents the only question in the case. The evidence, although a part of the record, is not abstracted as required by rule tenth of this court, and therefore is not examined by us.
The.- rejected testimony tended to show that it was the debt of'the appellee, and not the debt of auother. A partnership liability may become an individual debt against one member of the firm by contract,not in writing, between
Judgment reversed, with costs; cause remanded with direction to grant a new trial, and for further proceedings.
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