69 Vt. 197 | Vt. | 1896
Marshall Brown was the executor of the will of Robert H. Smith, and the defendant was a legatee and devisee under the will. The plaintiff as executor seeks to recover of the defendant in the common courts in assumpsit, the amount of three promissory notes, the first of which, dated August 8, 1873, is as follows:
“I, Charles Hitchcock, have received of Marshall Brown, as executor of the will of Robert H. Smith, late of Pawlet, Yt., deceased, four hundred and fifty dollars, which I agree to pay to him on demand with interest annually at the rate of 7 per cent, per annum from this date, or to allow and apply the same to him on the settlement or division of the real estate of Robert H. Smith, or out of the avails or proceeds thereof, when sold, or of my share thereof as said Brown may hereafter elect, with interest on the same annually at the rate of 7 per cent.
(Signed) Charles Hitchcock.”
The other two notes are in the same terms, differing only in dates and amounts, the second dated October 1, 1874, given for $100, the third dated October 27, 1874, given for $100.
The defendant pleaded, first, the general issue; second,
The defendant’s promise was in the alternative — to pay the notes on demand, or out of the real estate, or the avails thereof at the payee’s election.
The replication alleges that said Brown in his life-time and the plaintiff since Brown’s decease, made their election not to require payment of said sums on demand, but relied upon the alternative promise and therefore brought no action in Brown’s life-time. It further alleges that a settlement and division of the estate of said Brown had been made, and that a portion thereof had been decreed by the probate court to the defendant. It álleges no breach of the alternative promise by the defendant, nor any act of his by which the plaintiff was prevented from applying the proceeds of the sale of said real estate upon the notes at his election. For anything alleged the plaintiff might have made his election and applied such proceeds upon the notes. It in fact alleges that the plaintiff did make his election, but failed to make an application of the money received, but through no fault of the defendant.
Therefore the second plea is a good answer to the declaration, and the replication, which is only an amplification of the declaration, is no answer to the plea, but it shows that the plaintiff had no cause of action. The form of judgment is adopted as in Dunklee v. Goodenough, 65 Vt. 257.
Judgment reversed; demurrer sustained; declaration adjudged insufficient and cause remanded.