DocketNumber: No. 3,236
Citation Numbers: 25 Ind. App. 576
Judges: Black
Filed Date: 11/27/1900
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/24/2022
—The appellant was the plaintiff, and he assigns as error the overruling of his motion for a new trial. The appellee was the-administratrix of the estate of her deceased husband, and at her public sale of the personal property of the estate on the 3rd of March, 1898, the-appellant bid for, and the auctioneer struck off to him, the share of the decedent as landlord in growing wheat on certain land, notice being given at the time of the sale that the land would have to be measured before a note could be executed for the purchase price. By the terms of the sale a credit was to be given until December 25, 1898, on sums over $5, but the auctioneer announced that the purchaser should pay one-half of a bill for a quantity of fertilizer used in the sowing of the wheat, such one-lialf being $22, to be due September 1, 1898, the decedent having given his note to a certain fertilizer company for $44 for said fertilizer, due at that date. The appellant bid off the wheat at a certain suin per acre. The estate was insolvent, and would pay nothing on the general debts, said note for fertilizer being one of the general debts.
After the land had been measured as so announced, the clerk of the sale made out for the administratrix notes to be executed by the purchaser's at the sale and their sureties, among them two notes dated March 3, 1898, to be executed by the appellant and his surety, one for an' amount ($58.63) calculated by multiplying the amount of his bid per acre by the number of acres so ascertained, due December 25, 1898, and one for $22 due September 1, 1898, each payable to the order of the administratrix. These two notes were sent by the administratrix to the appellant for execution. A few
It is quite plain from the evidence in the record before us that both parties to the contract understood it to require, as a part of the terms of the sale, that both of the notes above described should be executed by the appellant with surety to the administratrix. This is clearly indicated by the testimony of the appellant himself, which we need not set forth at length. The appellant having failed and refused to perform the terms of the contract of sale on his part, the administratrix was fully warranted in treating the property bid off by him as unsold.
Whatever errors may have occurred in the conduct of the trial, if any, there can be no doubt, upon the showing made in evidence by the appellant, that his demand was without
Judgment affirmed.