37 Iowa 668 | Iowa | 1873
It appears to us that the promise implied by the acceptance of the devise is, that he will pay all the debts of the testator which are enforceable against his estate, whether they are less or more than the value of the portion of the estate devised to him, and that in order to collect the debt from such a devisee, it must be such a debt as could at the time be enforced against the estate; and that any defense available by an executor against the debt may be used by the devisee. In this respect, the liability of such a devisee is different from that of a person who makes a promise to pay a specific debt for another. But, even in this last case, the promise must be in writing, as also must a promise be in writing in order to be sufficient, under our statute, to defeat the bar by limitation. Notwithstanding the devise, its acceptance by the devisee and his liability thereby, the estate still remains liable to the creditor, and it seems to us that the creditor cannot hold his cause of action until it is barred'as against the estate,-his principal debtor, and then enforce it against the devisee, who. stands to the creditor only as a surety, though as to the estate he may be principal. The circuit court held otherwise, and so instructed the jury. For this error the judgment is
Reversed.