On September n, 1902, William Muirhead, the defendant, held a mortgage on certain goods, made to him by Berkowitz & Cooper to secure the payment of $200. The mortgagors being in default, Muirhead on that day took possession of the property and foreclosed the mortgage. On the following day the plaintiff, in an action brought by him against Berkowitz & Cooper, obtained an attachment against their property, and under it the sheriff seized the goods covered by Muirhead’s mortgage. Muirhead immediately gave the sheriff notice that he claimed to own the goods seized by the sheriff, and the question of title was thereupon tried by a sheriff’s jury and found in favor of Muirhead. Threats being made by Scherzer that he would indemnify the sheriff to take the property in question, Muirhead was induced to enter into an arrangement which on September 17, 1902, took the form of a stipulation in the attachment suit, signed by Berkowitz & Cooper, on the one part, and by Muirhead, on the other part, by the terms of which the property covered by the mortgage was to be delivered to Muirhead or his attorney, to be sold by Scherzer or Muirhead, and, after retaining the amount of Muirhead’s debt and legal disbursements, the surplus was to be paid to Scherzer. Muirhead was not a party to the attachment suit, nor was the stipulation signed by the attorney of any of the parties. No consideration was recited in the 'stipulation, and there was no formal expression of any promise on the part of Muirhead. Muirhead thereupon took the property and sold it for $600, and this action was brought to recover the sum of $375, claimed to be due to the plaintiff by virtue of the stipulation. At the trial, Scherzer had a verdict for $350, and this appeal was taken from the judgment in that action.
The defense, aside from the question as to the amount due to Muirhead for the legal disbursements mentioned in the stipulation, rested on the grounds that the stipulation was void, under the statute of frauds, for the reason that it was a contract on the part of Muir-head to answer for the debt of Berkowitz & Cooper, and was without consideration; also that the plaintiff’s remedy, if any, was by an action for an accounting, and that the court below had no jurisdiction to entertain such an action. The appellant also took several exceptions in the course of the trial to the admission or exclusion of evidence, to which we shall refer. Whatever force may be given to the stipulation, it certainly was not an undertaking by Muirhead to answer for the debt of Berkowitz & Cooper. On the contrary, if it imports any obligation at all on his part, it was a promise to pay his own debt. By the terms of the mortgage, he was to pay the overplus above his own debt and expenses to Berkowitz & Cooper, the mortgagors, which they, of course, could assign to Scherzer, and make it payable to him. We can conceive that the defendant might have made a plausible argument on the construction of the stipulation that it imposed no liability on Muirhead to pay the over-plus to Scherzer, but we express no opinion on that point, and could not do so, since the defendant, not having raised the question on the trial, cannot present it here for the first time.
The exceptions taken by the appellant do not constitute any ground *161of reversal. The exclusion of evidence of a demand by Berkowitz for the balance in Muirhead’s hands was quite right. If Scherzer was entitled to the money, no mere claim by Berkowitz would justify Muirhead in withholding it. The same is true of workmen employed by Berkowitz & Cooper. They had not the remotest connection with the mortgage, nor right to the proceeds of the sale of the mortgaged property. The question put to Mr. Rockmore, plaintiff’s attorney, was perhaps improper, as calling for an estimate of the amount of the “legal disbursements” provided for in the stipulation, but he did not answer that question. He answered that the fair compensation for collecting $200 was $25. This was not responsive, and might have been stricken out on motion, but it was allowed to remain in the evidence without objection. Substantial justice appears to have been done by the verdict. The judgment is right, and should stand.
Judgment affirmed, with costs. All concur.