19 Johns. 129 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1821
delivered the opinion of the Court. The only inquiry in this case, is, whether the pleas, or either of them, are sustainable. The replications are admitted to be bad. The first question is, whether the agreement of the 15th of April, 1819, extended the time of payment as stipulated in the condition of the bond; and, if so, whether such agreement can be pleaded in bar. The only thing said about the bond now in suit, in the agreement, is, that two-thirds of the value of the hops delivered in any one year, should be endorsed on the bond, until the same was paid. It is mere matter of inference, that the plaintiff was to forbear suing on the bond, during the five years within which the -defendant was to deliver the plaintiff the hops, raised by him on a certain farm mentioned in the agreement. It is by no means a necessary or certain inference, that such was the intention of the parties $ and as the parties have not stipulated that the plaintiff should forbear to sue on his bond, as the payments became due, I do not know what right _we have to say, that such was their agreement. According to the Civil Law, the intention to make a novation should be positively declared, without which there can be no novation. Pothier says, that in the jurisprudence of France, this prin
Judgment for the plaintiff.