50 Vt. 408 | Vt. | 1878
The opinion of the court was delivered by
No lapse of time bars a direct trust. Beckford v. Wade, 17 Ves. 87; Carter v. Murray, 5 Johns. Ch. 522; Decauche v. Sanetier, 3 Johns. Ch. 190; Kane v. Bloodgood, 7 Johns. Ch. 89. Where a person takes possession of property in
Whether it was necessary for the payee named in the order to have demanded its payment before bringing suit, it is unnecessary to consider or decide. It may be that under the language of the acceptance it would not be incumbent on the payee named in the order to show that the fund was sufficient for its payment. We think that it is quite evident that it would be incumbent on him to show that the defendant continued to hold the fund and exercise the office of trustee, and that neither the language of the order nor of the acceptance would preclude the defendant from showing that the fund had been lost or taken from him without his fault, in discharge of his liability thereon. As before stated, we think that the order was an equitable assignment of $500 from the trust-fund from Henry G. Catlin to the plaintiff, and that the acceptance thereof was an agreement by the defendant to hold so much of the trust-fund for the plaintiff instead of for Henry G. Catlin — that the defendant’s relation to this portion of the fund was not substantially different from what it had been when he held the same for Henry G. Catlin. The fact that the order is made payable out of a particular fund, determines that it is not in char- . acter a strictly legal bill of exchange. The relations of the defendant to this sum always having been, and still being, that of a trustee, lapse of time, under a^plea of the Statute of Limitations, does not operate to bar the action.