1 Denio 125 | Court for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors | 1845
The demurrer must be overruled. The defendant assumes that the declaration shows that his promises have been performed. In this I think he is in an error. The agreements counted upon show mutual promises: on the one side the plaintiff agreed to sell and convey a certain lot of ground to the defendant by a specified day, and by a particular kind of deed : on the other the defendant agreed to pay a certain sum of money on a certain day to the plaintiff, and to erect a brick dwelling house on the premises, to be occupied as such, and that he would not erect any building to be occupied in any manner that would be a nuisance to the vicinity of the premises. The declaration containing suitable allegations of the plaintiff’s performance of the agreement on his part, assigns a breach that the defendant had not erected a good brick dwelling house, to be occupied as such; but on the contrary had suffered and permitted a bake house to be erected thereon, and to be occupied in a manner that is a nuisance to ♦he -^«bn
The plaintiff must have judgment on the demurrer with leave to defendant to amend on the usual terms.