29 A. 553 | N.H. | 1891
The money attached in the trustee suit was not Morgan's money. The attachment gave him no right to it or to its possession, but merely a statutory lien, with the right to hold Morgan's interest in it, provided he should obtain judgment and seasonably sue out and levy an execution. Baker v. Beers,
Broadhurst was under no legal obligation to permit Morgan to undertake the defence of the Parsons suit and await the result of litigation, at least without being secured against the costs of litigation. It is not suggested that there was any defence to the suit? and none is perceived. If Parsons could not recover of Broadhurst, it is clear the latter was not chargeable as trustee.
Whether justice required that the declaration should be amended, *482
was a question of fact to be determined at the trial term. Sawyer v. Railroad,
Counts in case and assumpsit may be joined in a declaration on a single cause of action. Rutherford v. Whitcher,
Exceptions overruled.
CARPENTER, J., did not sit: the others concurred.