Defendant John R. Gooding bought of plaintiff a lot of fruit trees and agreed to set them out on his farm and to pay to plaintiff ‘ ‘ sixty dollars, due and payable as follows: All payments and interests here after particularly specified to date from the first day of May, 1892; one-fifth in six years, one-fifth in seven years, one-fifth in eight years, one-fifth in nine years, one-fifth in ten years, with interest at the rate of six per cent per annum, and if the interest be not paid annually to become as principal and bear the same rate of interest; the right being reserved to said Gooding to pay the full amount together with accrued interest at any time he may elect within the period of ten years next after the date last-above written.”
Plaintiff urges that the obligation for sixty dollars is a debt and that an action of debt will not lie until the whole sum is due. But by distinctions not based on much reason, assumpsit for damages for nonpayment of an installment could be maintained before others became due; though if the action were brought in debt it could not be instituted until all installments were due. [Rudder v. Price, 1 H. Blackstone, 547 ; Bush v. Stovall, supra.] In Iron Mountain Ry. Co. v. Stansell,
It will be observed that the case before ns concerns installments of the principal debt and not interest payable at stated times while the principal debt is unpaid. Interest payable annually may be the subject of an action separate from the principal (Stoner v. Evans,
The judgment is affirmed.
