5 Mo. 323 | Mo. | 1838
Lead Opinion
delivered' the- opinion of the court.
This was an action of assumpsit, commenced by Brown against Allen & Dougherty, in the St. Louis circuit court, to recover the value of a negro woman sold by them as auctioneers. The declaration contains three counts; the first and second, special counts, setting out in substance-the same state of facts; that is, that the plaintiff delivered the girl t-0 the- defendants, to be- by .them sold and disposed of for and on account of the plaintiff, for a certain reasonable reward to be- paid defendants- by plaintiff, in consideration of which, defendants undertook to render to plaintiff a true account of the sale of said negro; that plaintiff requested defendants to account, and that defendants refused to do so. The third count is for money had
On the trial, Gabriel P. Cerre was called as a witness 'by the plaintiff, and Cerre proved that he purchased the slave, in the declaration mentioned, at public auction, of the defendants, who were auctioneers; that at the sale the girl was represented as a sound woman, a good washer and ironer; but that he discovered, after the girl was taken home by him, that she was lame and not sound; and that a day or two after, not considering himself bound by his bidding, he put the girl in the hands of William Mull for the purpose of sending her back to the defendants. The sale was a cash sale. Bernard Finney proved that he was present and bid for the girl; that she was offered for sale by the defendants, as auctioneers, for cash, as sound, a good washer and ironer; that he bid for ■the girl as high as $250, and that Cerre overbid him '$5, and the girl was knocked down by the auctioneer to said Cerre-; the said slave was present at the sale; appeared to be of the age of forty-five years, and apparently sound ■and healthy; but that the witness, on some one remarking that the girl was lame, desisted from bidding. The witness further proved that, after the sale, the negro passed out of the auction room, but witness did not see her go into possession; but from conversation had after-wards with said Cerre, be took up the impression that the negro came into the possession of said Cerre.
The court 'charged the jury that if they should be of 'opinion from the evidence, that the slave in question was sold to Cerre upon the condition of prompt payment in cash, and was delivered to said Cerre, or taken possession of by him in virtue of such sale, and that Cerre either had or had not in fact paid for said slave, upon the sale thereof and delivery to him, the .jury should find for the plaintiff.
As the court had before observed in reference to Cer-re’s testimony, the jury should exclude it from their consideration altogether, inasmuch as in the opinion of the •court, the effect of Cerre's testimony, if believed, would be to exonerate the defendants in this case from a pecuniary liability, and consequently to exonerate the witness himself, who was represented in the sale by the defendants,
The quantum and measure of damages, the court left exclusively to the jury. To these opinions the counsel for the defendant excepted.
In this case the trial was had on the 27th day of April, and the motion for a new trial was not made until the 3d of May 'following, after a lapse of more than four days. “All motions for new trials shall be made within four days after the trial” — R. C. 1835, sec. 1, p. 496; and although the courts may, in some particular cases, on the suggestion of the party interested, look into the matter, and where substantial justice has not been done, may grant a new trial, yet a refusal to do so is not such an error as can be taken advantage of by the party who has suffered the time in which he might legally have asserted his rights to pass by. But if the court grants the new trial, the opposite party can take his exceptions to the decision of the court, and have his writ of error, and reverse the decision of the court, if the discretion of the court has not been exercised soundly in granting a new trial. There was no error then in overruling the defendant’s motion for a new trial.
The court' instructed the jury that if they should be of opinion from the evidence, that the slave in question was sold to Cerre upon the condition of prompt payment in cash, and was delivered to said'Cerre, or taken possession of by him in virtue of such sale, and that Cerre either had or had not in fact paid for said slave upon the sale thereof and delivery to him, the jury should find for the plaintiff. This instruction was not broad enough. It exonerated the jury from finding whether the plaintiff had proved such property in the slave in question as would entitle him to recover from-the defendants the proceeds of the sale of said negro,, and was therefore wrong.
The next instruction was, that the jury should exclude Cere’s testimony from sheir consideration altogether, inasmuch as in the opinion of the court, the effect of Cer-
Concurrence Opinion
We concur in the foregoing opinion, except as to the matter of the new trial; on that point we think the motion was too late to be heard.