2 Vt. 287 | Vt. | 1829
after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the Court. — It appears by the case that the defendant succeeded on trial,by showing a settlement with Farnham, and a discharge
The other point is no less clear. The sayings of the wife, while executing this agency, even an agency accompanied with an interest, were good evidence against the plaintiff, who had thus created her his agent. The plaintiff had left the state, and left the whole controul of this business, if not of every other, with his wife, to settle and controul the avails. Her sayings come fully within the rules in 2 StarJcie, 61 — 2, and 712, as evidence against her husband. After she said what was testified she did say, about Farnham's ownership and care of this demand, every person had a right to treat with him, and make payments to him ; and doing
A further objection is raised, that the note given by the defendant and his surety,was no payment, until it should be itself paid. The note of the debtor is not, of course, payment of an antecedent debt. It is only so when the parties stipulate that it shall be so. But the note of the debtor with a surety, as in tbe present case, is prima facie a payment; and must, at least, suspend the original cause of action, like a case decided in JYeiv-Yor7c, until the note should prove of no avail through some mistake. It is as much a payment as a negotiable note or a contract of a higher nature. It is to be presumed that the defendant had, by a pledge or otherwise, secured his bail. Moreover, the discharge shows that it was agreed to be in full. And the naming, in the discharge^ sum, a few dollars less than the judgment in suit, would not vary the case. The principle has never been adopted in this state, that a less sum being named in a discharge prevents its operating as such. The note was a good consideration for the discharge, as mentioned by the court in their instructions to the jury. The exceptions are overruled, and the judgment of the county court is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.