56 Vt. 695 | Vt. | 1884
The opinion of the court was delivered by
I. The testimony of Butter and Howard should have been excluded. The fact that the plaintiff charged them nothing for the use of his horse was not evidence that he charged the intestate nothing. The making of a contract cannot be shown by the evidence of other contemporaneous ones. Phelps v. Conant, 30 Vt. 277; Walworth v. Barron, 54 Vt. 677. The rule in Eastman v. Premo, 49 Vt. 355, does not apply. For the purpose of showing a fraudulent intent, on the part of the
II. To remove the statute bar the plaintiff contends that the payment by the intestate of one dollar and fifty cents and one dollar and thirty five cents were payments made on the plaintiff’s account generally. If so the statute would not apply. The referee has found that such payments were made to extinguish the charges of the same amounts immediately preceding them ; and “payment of specific items of charge, unaccompanied by any circumstances showing a recognition of. any other account, will not bo sufficient to remove the operation of the statute.” Hodge v. Manley, 25 Vt. 210. The finding of the referee is conclusive as to the facts found, if there was any evidence before him having a tendency to establish such facts. The reports shows that the only evidence was the dates and amounts of the charges and payments. The item in question was charged in 1872 ; the next items were in May'and November, 1876, with a credit in February, 1877, of cash, the exact amount of said last two items. The remaining item in June, 1879, one dollar and thirty-five cents, is followed by a credit of cash within one month, of the same sum. The first debit item, the one in dispute, was nearly four years old before the second item was made, and the two last are nearly three years apart. The distance in time between the debit items, the fact that all save one are followed by cash credits, very soon after they were made, of the exact sums to pay them, we think, have a tendency to show that the credits were paid to apply upon the specific items and not upon the general account. The finding of the referee must therefore stand, the statute held a bar, and the judgment affirmed.