151 Mass. 445 | Mass. | 1890
The instrument of October 3, 1871, signed by the claimant’s testator, Charles F. Barker, which requested the plaintiff to obtain all the money he could on the forty shares of Merchants’ Bank stock belonging to the testator, and to pay his notes to the Freeman’s Bank, and authorized the plaintiff to apply any and all balance towards the payment of the indebtedness of the testator to the plaintiff, was not an assignment of the shares to the plaintiff, but an authority to sell the same and to use the proceeds in the manner recited. Even if the paper be construed as conferring the authority also to collect and dispose of the dividends already due and unpaid thereon, as it was
The payment of money by an executor from the funds of an estate in settlement and compromise of unliquidated and disputed claims against it, and the acceptance thereof as such, would operate to extinguish them, even if there had been no formal release under seal. The release and discharge of all claims and demands against the executor was a release and discharge of the estate. Neither the plaintiff nor the executor in fact knew of these dividends. Even if it be true, as the plaintiff contends, that the dividends, had the plaintiff known of their existence, might-rightfully have been applied to the payment of his debt, he had not so applied them. They were still, as we construe the paper of October 8, 1871, the property of the estate, and when the debt was extinguished the plaintiff had no further interest in them.
Exceptions overruled.