This is an action of book account in which tbe plaintiff seeks to recover for a quantity of marble, Tbe plaintiff’s claim' consists of a. single item of $670,44. Tbe marble was sold and delivered under a special contract to furnish marble at a specified price per foot sufficient to construct a certain sidewalk which tbe defendant bad contracted to build for tbe United States Government. Tbe marble was by agreement to be measured after it should be all laid in the sidewalk. It was delivered and tbe walk laid and completed about tbe 6th of August, 1860, and tbe marble measured by tbe plaintiff and tbe defendant according to contract. This action was commenced August 26th, 1861.
Tbe first objection made to a recovery is, tbat tbe term of credit bad not expired at tbe commencement of tbe suit. If this is tbe fact tbe objection is fatal, as there are no other dealings
2. It is also objected that the draft drawn by the plaintiff in favor of Page, cashier of the Rutland bank, on the defendant for the amount of this debt, and delivered to Page as collateral security for a debt the plaintiff owed and still owes the Bank, and, as the defendant claims, accepted by the defendant, is a bar to the suit. This draft was drawn at sight and presented to the defendant for payment or acceptance, just after the marble in question was measured. The defendant told Page he would pay it when he received his money from the government for this work done under the first contract. There is no doubt but that a parol acceptance is binding, and no doubt but that an acceptance varying the time of payment from the time specified in the bill, is as binding as if absolute according to the terms of the bill, if the holder accepts it. The only doubt in this case is whether Page received the defendant’s promise as an acceptance, and whether the parties so understood and treated it. I think the facts reported show that it was so treated, or at least that the transaction amounts to such an equitable appropriation of of the fund to the use and benefit of the bank, that the plaintiff ought not to be allowed to collect this debt and divert it from the bank. But the majority of the court do not give to the facts reported on this point precisely the same legal effect that I should be inclined to. But we are all agreed that there is sufficient doubt whether the defendant may not hereafter be held upon that acceptance, to warrant the court in imposing a rule upon the plaintiff which shall protect the defendant from such liability. The judgment is affirmed under a rule that the plaintiff shall not. have execution till he causes the draft to be deposited with the clerk for the defendant, or a release by the bank to the defendant of all claim upon him by virtue of the draft or his acceptance or promise to pay it to the bank.