This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1903 edition. Excerpt: ...by the defendant, Sanders, to the orator, on the 17th of April, 1852, of a farm in Bethel, which he purchased of the orator, to 1 Compare: Hughes v. Williams, 12 Ves. 493; Butts v. Broughton, 72 Ala. 295; Hamson v. Wyse, 24 Conn. 1; Moshier v. Norton, 100 1ll. 63; Barnett v. Wilson, 54 la. 41; Hubbell v. ...
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This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1903 edition. Excerpt: ...by the defendant, Sanders, to the orator, on the 17th of April, 1852, of a farm in Bethel, which he purchased of the orator, to 1 Compare: Hughes v. Williams, 12 Ves. 493; Butts v. Broughton, 72 Ala. 295; Hamson v. Wyse, 24 Conn. 1; Moshier v. Norton, 100 1ll. 63; Barnett v. Wilson, 54 la. 41; Hubbell v. Moulson, 54 N. Y. 225; Pertenbaugh v. Ludwick, 31 Pa. St. 131; Robertson v. Campbell, 2 Call, 421.--Ed. 230 SANDERS V. WILSON ET AL. secure the payment of a note of two thousand dollars, payable in ten years from date, with interest annually. On the 9th day of August, 1855, the defendant, Sanders, conveyed the same farm to the defendant, Wilson, who assumed the payment of the note and mortgage to the orator., In November, 1855, there being some interest due and unpaid on the mortgage note to the orator, he brought this bill returnable to the next December term of the court of chancery. The defendant, Wilson, answered the bill, setting up that there was an outstanding mortgage upon the same farm of one thousand dollars, by the orator in 1845, and claiming that the same should be removed before the orator was entitled to a decree, or provided for in the decree so as to save his rights. This outstanding mortgage was paid and extinguished by the orator in September, 1857, as is now conceded by the parties. In the spring of 1856, the orator believing, as he says, that the defendant, Wilson, did not intend to pay and redeem his mortgage, entered into the possession of the mortgaged premises, and has since carried on the farm, and taken the rents and profits to himself, and the case now stands only upon the questions arising upon the accounting by the orator for such rents and profits. The case was referred in due course to a master to take the account, ..
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