By the Court,
The only question arising upon the bill of exceptions in this case is, whether the evidence offered shall have been received 1 The law has been understood to be well settled, that a covenant tinder seal, not broken, cannot be discharged by a.parol agreement. 1 Taunt, 430. 10 Wendell, 184, 11 id. 30. It has been supposed by counsel that some cases in this court contain a contrary doo= trine. The case of Fleming v. Gilbert, 3 Johns. R. 530, as stated in the opinion of the court, was upon a bond, the con-
The extent to which these cases have gone is this: that after a breach of a sealed contract, the parties to it may discharge any liability upon it by entering into a new agreement in relation to the same subject matter, which new agreement is a valid contract, founded uponsufficientconsideration. Li Fleming v. Gilbert, it is assumed that the plaintiff prevented the defendant from performing his contract, and therefore should not take advantage of his failure. Here it is not pretended that any thing was done or said by the plaintiff to prevent the defendant from a literal compliance with his contract. To bring this case within the principal of Lattimore v. Harsen, there should have been not only an avowed refusal to perform, but a subsequent executed substituted agreement: and so, also, as to the case of Dearborn v. Cross & Thrasher. Had the plaintiff in this case not only waived the sealed contract by parol, but had accepted and taken possession of the new store, in lieu of that which he was to have had by his sealed contract, the cases would have been more nearly parallel. It will be seen, then, that there has been no innovation upon established principles, and that the law remains as it has always existed, that a sealedexecutory contract cannot be released or rescinded by a parol executory contract; but that, after breach of a sealed contract, a right of action may be waived or released by a new parol contract in relation to the same subject matter, or by any valid parol executed contract. The offer in this case was not that any new agreement had been entered into between these parties, either executed or executory, but that the plaintiff assented to the taking down the old building and the erection of the National Hotel; that he stood by and advised this change, or assented to the same, and spoke of the store in the new building as the one which
Judgment affirmed.