13 Mass. 104 | Mass. | 1816
The supposed trustee has discharged himself by his answers to the interrogatories put to him, unless he is obliged by law to answer the last interrogatory ; which is intended to draw from him an acknowledgment, that, in the purchase of some real estate of the principal debtor, part of the consideration was a debt arising upon an usurious loan, which the trustee had made to the debtor.
If the object of the interrogatory be, to avoid the conveyance of real estate, it is improper ; because no man shall be held, by his answers, to disparage his title.
If the object of the interrogatory be, to recover from the trustee the excess beyond the amount of the debts and the lawful interest
Trustee discharged.
See Devoll vs. Brownell, 5 Pick. 448. — Ed.]
See Bull vs. Loveland, 10 Pick. 9; Greenleaf on Evidence, 500, et seq. — Ed.]