59 N.H. 215 | N.H. | 1879
The statute, requiring the appointment of a state agent to furnish town agents with pure liquors, does not withdraw this case from the operation of the common-law principle which authorizes the enforcement here of the contracts that were legal in Massachusetts. Gen. Laws, c. 109. The plaintiff was an agent of the state in a limited and peculiar sense. It does not appear that his making in Massachusetts a sale, valid by the law of that state, was a breach of his fiduciary duty. *217
If the defendant had not paid any particular part of the account by the remittance of $89.50, but had sent that sum as a general payment on the account, it would have been applied first to items of existing legal indebtedness. Richards v. Columbia,
The indisputable and decisive fact of the defendant's intention is not expressly stated in the referee's report, but conclusive evidence of it is stated; and a report in conflict with that evidence could not stand. The report may be amended by the referee; or if, by reason of accident or mistake, the question of intention was not fully tried, the report may be recommitted for a new trial. Such order as the case requires will be made at the trial term.
Case discharged.
ALLEN, J., did not sit: the others concurred. *218