17 Vt. 366 | Vt. | 1845
The opinion of the court was delivered by
We can see no reason for reversing the judgment of the county court. There is nothing in the terms of the assignment, which bound the creditors to delay commencing suits. Neither is there any such agreement to delay implied in the fact of the plaintiffs’ accepting and receiving the amount paid to them by the assignees, as trustees.
The case of Kingsbury v. Deming et al.,
Im Kingsbury v. Riley A. Kerning and Albert Onion, Windsor Co. Feb. T. 1842. This was an action of assumpsit upon a promissory note, signed by the defendants as partners, and came to the county court by appeal. In the
Upon the trial of the issue the only evidence offered by the defendants was an assignment in writing, executed by the defendants, bearing date prior to the commencement of this action, which purported to convey to the assignees, therein named, all the partnership property of the defendants “ in trust, to “make sale of the property herein conveyed, and collect the debts and “ choses in action belonging to us, with all due diligence, to defray their “ expenses in the business intrusted to them herein, to pay the several joint “ creditors of the said R. A. 'Deming &, Co., in equal proportions, then to pay “ the balance,' if any, in equal shares, one half to the creditors off the said. “ Albert, and the other half to the creditors of the said Riley A., to keep an “ account of their doings, and the same render to the said Riley and Albert, “ and to pay them the balance, if any, which may remain in their hands,” and also an acceptance in writing, indorsed upon the back of said assignment, and signed by the plaintiff, prior to the commencement of this action, and by several creditors of the defendants, which was in these words, — “ We hereby “ accept of the provision made for us in the foregoing assignment, and agree
In the supreme court the case was argued by D. Kellogg and Z. ’Adams, for. plaintiff, and by N. Richardson and 0. Hutchinson, for defendants; and The Coubt held, that the facts pleaded, and proved, showed a sufficient consideration for the agreement entered into by the plaintiff, and that the agreement, signed by him, operated as a temporary bar of his right of action, and that the evidence of such agreement, in the form in which it was offered, was properly received; and the judgment of the county court was affirmed.