Sargeant v. Executors of Sargeant

18 Vt. 330
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedFebruary 15, 1846
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 18 Vt. 330 (Sargeant v. Executors of Sargeant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sargeant v. Executors of Sargeant, 18 Vt. 330 (Vt. 1846).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Redfield, J.

1. It is claimed, that, inasmuch as no exceptions were filed by the defendants, in the court below, to the report of the ■referees, but only to the judgment of the court, the questions attempted to be reserved are not properly raised here. But when referees,’ in the county court, report the facts, referring questions of law to the court, there is no necessity for filing any exceptions to the report. That is well enough. The only benefit of exceptions to a report of referees, or auditor, ever, is to point out to the court some question of law, which it is claimed'has been decided erroneously. But when the referees themselves point out a question of law, the final determination of which they refer to the court, although they themselves décide it provisionally, it is not necessary to file exceptions to the report. And especially, where the county court have' decided such question of law and allowed exceptions to their decision, should we be doing great injustice in a case, to give their bill of exceptions a construction so different from its manifest import. We think the case comes into this court in a shape sufficiently intelligible.

2. The only question, urged here by the defendants, is in regard to the notes, which were provisionally disallowed by the referees, on the ground that they were barred by the statute of limitations. It is claimed, that these notes, being a portion of the current dealing between the parties, are saved from the.operation of the statute of limitations upon general principles, every fresh item in the dealing saving all the previous items upon the opposite side, as has been often decided in regard to current accounts. But, not to enter into the consideration of that question, it seems to the court, that these claims are saved from the statute by the reservation contained in the statute of November 9, 1831, excepting all offsets from the operation [332]*332of the statute of limitations, where the claim pleaded in offset was in existence at the time the claim, to which it is pleaded in offset, accrued.

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Related

Hogan & Hogan v. Sullivan
64 A. 234 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1906)

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Bluebook (online)
18 Vt. 330, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sargeant-v-executors-of-sargeant-vt-1846.