31 Mo. 488 | Mo. | 1862
delivered the opinion of the court.
This was an action commenced by Atkins against Nicholson, before a justice of the peace, on an account for three dollars and ninety cents, for six and a half bushels of worthless Irish potatoes, sold to plaintiff as “good potatoes.” On
1. If the jury believe from the evidence there was a warranty, either express or implied, of the soundness of the potatoes, and it turned out that they were not sound, but sold by defendant to plaintiff as sound, the plaintiff ought to recover.
2. If the jury believe from the evidence that the potatoes were bought or sold from a sample and that sample was good, and the lot or part of it unsound, then the plaintiff ought to recover for the unsoundness.
The court then, at defendant’s instance, gave the following, viz:
1. If the jury believe from the evidence that the plaintiff saw and examined, or had the opportunity of examining the potatoes bought by him of the defendant, and that neither the defendant nor any authorized agent of his warranted said potatoes to be prime and sound potatoes, then they will find for the defendant.
The defendant in due time moved for a new trial, because the verdict was contrary to the law and the evidence, because the jury disregarded the evidence and instructions, and because the verdict is not supported by the evidence; which being overruled, the defendant excepted. There was nothing in the evidence tending to show that the sale was made by sample, or that there was any warranty of the thing sold, and the instructions given for the plaintiff, based upon the hypothesis that there was such evidence, were therefore wrong. It is improper for a court to instruct a jury upon a state of facts which there is no evidence in the cause to sustain. The only tendency of such instructions is to mislead the jury; and we can account for the verdict in this case upon no other supposition than that the jury whs misled by the instructions. The verdict of the jury being against the law and the testimony, the law commissioner ought to have granted the defendant a new trial, and for his refusal to do so the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded;