44 Vt. 561 | Vt. | 1872
The opinion of the court was delivered by
I. The principle that a written instrument cannot be enlarged, varied, or contradicted by parol testimony is too
II. The commissioner finds, if Mrs. Low’s evidence is admissible, that the colt charged was delivered by the testator to the intestate, as a gift to Mrs. Low. “ The contract or cause of action in issue and on trial,” was, whether the intestate purchased the colt of the testator. Neither of the parties to that cause of action is living. Mrs. Low, the administratrix of the intestate, is interested in her husband’s estate, and to show that the colt was delivered by the testator as her property, and not as her hus
III. The only remaining question is, whether the charges for cash lent, which wore allowed against the defendant estate by the commissioners on that estate, came up to the county court on the appeal by the plaintiff estate. All the items which the plaintiff estate joresented to the- commissioners appointed by the probate court, were recoverable in a single suit in assumpsit. They found but one claim. The commissioners, as was their duty, indicated what part of the plaintiff’s claim consisted of a, note, and what part of book account items. Nothing has come to our attention to show that in taking the appeal, the plaintiff estate appealed only from a part of the action of the commissioners and of the probate court in reference to the claim of the plaintiff estate. The appeal appears to have been general, and as such, would bring the whole claim of the plaintiff estate before the county court. This, we think, would be the effect where the claim was
The result is, the pro forma judgment of the county court for the defendant is reversed, and judgment rendered for the plaintiff to recover the amount of the note with interest and costs.