Cox v. Maxwell
Cox v. Maxwell
Opinion of the Court
There is no doubt that the defendants’ testator, if he saw fit, could promise the plaintiff to pay her an annuity for her life, in consideration of services to be rendered, or of a promise to render services, and that the testator’s promise would be binding after the services had been rendered as stipulated. The only question is, whether the words used import such a promise. The plaintiff’s letter proposed that the intestate should promise “ to give me [the plaintiff] the sum of two thousand ($2,000) dollars a year during my life,” from June 1,1886,— about a year after her letter. The testator assented to the proposition. The meaning of the words thus adopted by the testator is sufficiently plain, and is not cut down by the reference to “ the
Case to stand for trial.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Sadie K. Cox v. Charles Maxwell & others
- Status
- Published