13 Ala. 57 | Ala. | 1848
In Powell, et al. v. Powell, 10 Ala. R.
The foregoing remarks are perhaps not inapplicable to the objection that Alexander Watson’s share of the testatrix’s estate was permitted to be paid by claims which the executor had purchased against him. The decree affirms that these were obtained by the executor with the assent of Watson, and under an express agreement that they should be allowed as a payment. This we must take to be true, as there was ■no exception to the ruling of the court showing the reverse. If the money had been paid to the legatee himself, it is conceded that it would have been good, and we can conceive of no difference in principle where the payment is made to his creditor by his direction or consent. Such, it must be assumed, is the fact in the present case, and the credit was therefore properly allowed.
But conceding that if the obligation is alone looked to, it would constitute a case of usury, and the question then arises, whether the testatrix did not waive all objection to the performance of her contract founded on that ground, by the
Conceding the death of the brother previous to the first day of January, 1846, and still there is nothing to show that the interest should not have been calculated down to that day. Perhaps the executor may not previously have realized of the estate a sufficient sum, after paying other demands entitled to a preference, to extinguish the debt in question. Upon this point the bill of exceptions is entirely silent, and we can make no intendment against the decree of the orphans’ court. If it had been shown that the executor was in funds, which he could have applied to pay himself before the 1st of January, 1846, from that time the interest should have ceased. In the condition of the record, it cannot be affirmed that there is error in the decree; and it is therefore affirmed.