43 N.H. 413 | N.H. | 1861
If the mortgage of the infant were to be regarded as an executory contract, it would be invalid until it was ratified ; and if it is deemed an executed contract, it is binding until it is avoided. Edgerly v. Shaw, 25 N. H. 516; Carr v. Clough, 26 N. H.
We do not thinkthe verbal consent of the mortgagee to the saléis a sufficient answer to the indictment, as the statute expressly requires a written consent to justify a sale. Rev. Stat., ch. 132, sec.8-10.
Another question might arise in this case, whether, if the mortgage were avoided, the vendee could be a party injured by the sale, within the meaning of the statute; but the views we have expressed seem to dispose sufficiently of the questions transferred.
Our opinion must, therefore, be certified to the court at the trial term that the evidence of the minority of the defendant at the time of the execution of the mortgage, was competent; but that the verbal assent of the mortgagee to the sale of the mortgaged chattel furnishes no defense to this indictment.