6 Mo. 392 | Mo. | 1840
Opinion of the. Court delivered by
Lewis brought h’u action against Atwood in the circuit court of St. Louis county, where he obtained a judgment, to reverse w hi., a Atwood'appeals to this court.
The action is founded on, two notes, the one dated the24th May, 1836, for $1023 33, payable two years after date, the other, for the same sum, payable three years after date.
The defendant {leaded three pleas: 1st, nil debet; 2d, that at the time he executed the said notes, and before the delivery thereof to the plaintiff, he, the said plaintiff, stipulated and agreed with the said defendant, by a written instrument of the same date with the said notes, of which proiert is made, that if, at the time of the maturity of the said notes, it should not be convenient for the defendant to pay the same, the plaintiff would wait the convenience of the defendant to pay; in consideration of which, the defendant also, by said agreement, promised to pay the plaintiff at the rate of six per cent ■per year upon the amount of the said notes, for such time as the said plaintiff should wait for the payment of the said notes after they should fall due, which interest the defendant avers he has paid; and that when the notes became due, it was not convenient for him to pay the same, &c.
The third plea is the same as the first, except, that it ts averred, that the agreement was entered into after the execution and delivery of the two notes. The plaintiff demurred to the second and third pleas; and on a subsequent day,
The defendant objected to the leave given by the court to the phinrhT to amend the ¡leadings by craving oyer, contending, that a demurrer cannot^be amended, and th.it having failed to crave oyer beiore he demurred, the jlninliff could not afterwards come in and crave over, lie excepten ,' , this deui ion of the court, m granting leave to amend by having oyer of the instrument of which the de'endant in plea had made proferí. If any te stimony had been given on the occasion, tobe preserved in the bill of exceptions, statute directs the party how to rroceed to get the bill fore this court, even when the circuit court refuses to sign -his bill. He must procure it to be signed by three by-standers, &c.; if then the court refuse him leave to file, because it
On the last point I concur. But on the question of the effect of the covenant, I rather think it amounts to a release of
I concur in affirming the judgment — on the ground that the covenant here pleaded in bai did not amount toa release, and consequently could only be the ground of a separate action.