51 Vt. 67 | Vt. | 1878
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The parol evidence which was received subject to the objection and exception of the defendant it is claimed was inadmissible for three reasons: First, that the trade that was made was evidenced by the writings executed between the parties, and parol proof was not admissible to vary, add to, or diminish them. The objection embraces a well recognized and familiar principle of the law of evidence, and if the evidence offered, in legal effect, comes within it, it was error to admit it. But we do not understand that the evidence had that effect. Its tendency was to eatablish an agreement collaterally connected with the sale of the farm and personal property as shown by the deed, notes, and bill of sale, and not to contradict anything that was contained in them, and it was admissible for that purpose. Buzzell v. Willard, 44 Vt. 44, and cases there cited.
Second, that the promise, if any was made, related to a sale of an interest in land, and hence was within the Statute of Frauds. This objection is not well taken. The evidence was offered to prove a contract on the part of the defendant to remove an existing incumbrance that rested upon the land, and such a contract is not, in legal contemplation, a contract for the sale of any interest in the land.
Third, that the contract was simply to pay the mortgage note of Dingwall, and hence was within the Statute of Frauds; and that the promise of the defendant was without consideration. The contract that the evidence tended to show was not in terms to pay the debt of another. The contract was susceptible of full performance without a payment of the note given by Dingwall, and hence was not within the statute; and the evidence preceding that which was objected to, in our judgment, tended to show a sufficient legal consideration to support the promise.
The parol evidence that was offered by the plaintiff, tended to show that at the time the trade was made, and as a part of it, the
The last request of the defendant to the court should have been complied with, with the qualification that the jury should find the contract to have been as the defendant’s evidence tended to show. There is nothing in the exceptions that would justify the inference that anything further was said by the court than what there appears.
Judgment reversed, and cause remanded.