Court Opinion

ID: 8046293
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 03:59:45.639792+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:37:30.465046
License: Public Domain

Sawyer, J.
It has never been understood that the statute which requires claims against the estate of a person deceased to *229be presented to the administrator before suit brought, contemplated a written statement, or specification of the claim, as essential.
In Tebbets v. Tilton, 31 N. H. (11 Foster) 273, it is said the claim may be presented in any form which brings the nature and amount of the claim distinctly to the notice of the administrator, unless, in the case of a claim founded upon a promissory note, or other contract in writing, he objects to the mode in which it is exhibited where the original paper is not produced, and requires that to be exhibited. In that case, and in Mathes v. Jackson, 7 N. H. 259, it was held that presenting a copy of the note constituting the claim is a sufficient exhibition of it, within the meaning of the statute, if he does not require the original lo be produced.
There is nothing in the statute which indicates that a written statement is contemplated. The object of the statute is to bring the claim to the knowledge of the administrator, that he may be enabled to judge whether or not to apply for a decree of insolvency, and also that he may make enquiry into it with a view to furnish himself with the necessary information for its proper adjustment. Both these purposes are as fully subserved by any other form of presentment which gives him to understand its nature and amount, as by a specification of it in writing. From the testimony of Richards, though somewhat confused and indefinite, the jury might have found that the plaintiff, in January, 1853, demanded of the.defendants the sum of $250, due to him from their testator, on account of the sale of the Myrick land, and that they, understanding the nature and amount of the claim, and the object and purpose of the plaintiff in making the demand upon them, declined to do any thing in relation to it. The evidence was competent to be submitted to the jury upon the question whether the claim was exhibited to the defendants before suit brought.
Another question raised by the case is, whether, upon the facts which the evidence reported tends to establish, the plaintiff is entitled to recover under the general count in indebitatus as-sumpsit.
*230Repeated decisions in our own courts have recognized the doc-tóre, established by numerous authorities elsewhere, that when all the stipulations of a contract have been fulfilled on the part of one of the parties, and nothing remains to be done under it but the payment by the other of a fixed and definite sum, a recovery may be had for the money thus to be paid under the general count, although, for a breach of the contract in all other particulars than the payment of such money, a special count, setting forth the contract, might be required. Mitchell v. Gile, 12 N. H. 390 ; Hale v. Handy, 26 N. H. (6 Foster) 206 ; Insurance Co. v. Hunt, 30 N. H. (10 Foster) 219.
We think this case is one for the application of that doctrine. The facts which the jury might have found upon the evidence introduced, are the following: Jonathan Little, the father of the plaintiff, and of the defendants’ testator, died in 1829, leaving the two sons his heirs-at-law. They, claiming the “Myrick land” as his heirs, brought their action to recover possession against Gardner, and in 1831 obtained judgment, entered into possession, and retained it until 1839, when the plaintiff executed a conveyance of that tract, with other lands, to the defendants’ testator, under an agreement on his part to pay or secure therefor $2650 at the time of the conveyance, and the further sum of $250 at the expiration of twenty years from the rendition of the judgment, if the possession under the judgment should continue undisturbed for those twenty years, so as to quiet the title upon which it was founded against any adverse claim of the Myrick heirs. This is the whole of the agreement to be gathered from the evidence. There is nothing in it to show that the plaintiff undertook that the possession should continue undisturbed, nor that he contracted to do any thing on his part beyond the execution of the conveyance. His contract was all performed when he delivered the deed to the testator, whether the possession should be disturbed or not. The contract of the testator, on the other hand, was in the alternative, to pay the additional $250, in the event that the possession continued undisturbed; but to pay nothing beyond the $2650 if it should be interrupted. *231The whole arrangement, beyond that of giving the deed on one side and paying or securing the purchase money on the other, consisted in the stipulation for paying a further sum as a part of the purchase money, if a certain contingency should happen: to wit., the quiet occupation for the twenty years, and for the payment of nothing farther if the contingency should not happen. In the event that the possession should he disturbed, the whole contract was fully executed, in all its stipulations, on- both sides, upon the instant of the delivery of the deed and the receipt of the money, or securities for the $2650. In the other event, it remained that the testator should pay the $250 — a part of the purchase money agreed to be paid as so much towards the consideration for the conveyance. The twenty years having elapsed without any interruption or disturbance of the possession, the jury would have been warranted in finding upon the evidence that the contingency upon which the payment of the $250, as a part of the purchase money, depended, had occurred, and that, consequently, this additional sum had become due to the plaintiff. Nothing remaining to be done under the contract but to pay that sum, the plaintiff may recover it under the general count.
The view thus taken disposes of the other question which has been made in the case, whether the agreement is within the statute of frauds. The case is not one of an agreement on one side to pay the $250 at the expiration of the twenty years, in consideration of an undertaking on the other that peaceable possession shall be had during that period. The quiet possession for the twenty years was obviously the inducement for the promise to pay the additional $250, but it was to be paid as an addition to or enlargement of the consideration for the conveyance. The entire sum of $2900 was agreed to be paid, absolutely as to part and conditionally as to the residue, as the purchase money for the land. The whole consideration for which that sum was to be paid went into the hands of the testator, as was stipulated by the terms of the agreement, immediately upon the contract being made, and he has received the full benefit of it. For this the plaintiff has the right of action under the general count upon the *232promise to pay, which the law raises, and such promise is not within the statute of frauds. Goodwin v. Gilbert, 9 Mass. 514; Moore v. Ross, 11 N. H. 547 : Fiske v. McGregory, 34 N. H. 414.

Judgment on the verdict.