24 Vt. 485 | Vt. | 1852
The judgment of the' county court in this case, must be affirmed. The questions arise upon the disallowance, by the auditor, of two items in the defendant’s account, being numbers 14 and 41, as designated by the auditor, which
The difficulty in this case, is, that no such application has been made by the parties, neither has the auditor found as a fact in the case, that such an agreement was made by them. And those items of charge are now presented as subsisting claims in offset to the plaintiff’s account, and the court are requested to make the application. But the court will not apply one claim in offset to another, but such as are legal, and which can be legally enforced by action. The result would be the same, if the auditor had found an express agreement of the parties to that effect, for the agreement to pay for the liquors when made at the time of sale, is .as void as the sale. No court will enforce such agreement. The jjarties must carry it into effect themselves, and make the application, or it cannot be done at all. It is further to be observed, that the auditor has found no agreement to that effect, much less the application. An expectation that such an application was to be made, is not an agreement, particularly, when the auditor finds that no particular agreement, or conversation, was had about it between them. The charges were properly disallowed.