17 A. 976 | N.H. | 1888
The expenses of defending the Burns estate against the claims of Nancy Burns and Mary A. Berry were not chargeable to Joseph Madigan. That litigation affected him only as it diminished the estate. The suits being founded upon alleged claims accruing against John Burns in his lifetime, the reasonable expenses in defending against them were proper matters to be allowed by the probate court, and paid out of the assets of his estate.
It is a general rule of the common law that sums of money payable at fixed times are not apportionable during the intervening periods. A contract for the payment of rent at a specified time is not apportionable in respect of time, unless by special provision, and a covenant to pay rent on a specified day creates no debt until the day of payment arrives. Perry v. Aldrich,
Case discharged.
CARPENTER, J., did not sit: DOE, C. J., absent: the others concurred.