42 Miss. 94 | Miss. | 1868
delivered the opinion of the court.
• The declaration in this case alleges, that on the 17th day of June, AJD. 1864, said defendant received from the plaintiff the sum of twelve hundred and eighty-eight dollars and fifty cents, in full payment for five bales of cotton, weighing in the aggregate 2,577 pounds, which said cotton, after having been thus paid for, was left in the care and keeping of said defendant, to be by him kept in good order, and to be delivered by the defendant to the plaintiff or his order, when called on to deliver the same. Plaintiff avers that the defendant has wholly failed and refused to deliver said cotton to plaintiff or Iiis order, though often called on to deliver the same, and still refuses so to do, to the damage of the plaintiff, in the.sum of fifteen hundred dollars, &e.
The following is a copy of the instrument sued on: — .
“ $1,288^^5-. Eeceived of I). B. Comfort, the sum of twelve hundred and eighty-eight and dollars, in full payment fbr (5) bales of cotton, weighing in the aggregate 2,577 poundsj at 50 cents a pound. I agree to keep said cotton in good order, and deliver the same to said Comfort or his' order whenever called*96 upon to do so. This obligation is to bind me only so far as for me to do my duty in keeping the cotton housed and dry. If the cotton hy accident should be burnt or injured in any other way, not by neglect, I am not responsible. June 17,1864.
(Signed) “D. C. Beauchamp.”
The defendant in the Circuit Court pleaded four pleas, — the general issue and three special pleas.
The second and fourth pleas admit the sale of the cotton, and payment of the purchase-money, but aver that payment was wholly in Confederate States treasury notes or currency, averred to have been issued without authority of law and contrary to public policy, and that said contract was illegal and null and void. The third plea avers that the cotton set forth in the complaint of the plaintiff was wholly destroyed without the neglect of the defendant, and cannot now be delivered. <
The plaintiff demurred to each of these special pleas, which was sustained as to the second and fourth pleas, whereupon leave was granted the defendant to answer over, which he declined to do, and judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff on said pleas. The defendant confessed the demurrer to his third plea, and asked leave to amend the same, which was granted, but no amended plea appears in the record. The record recites that on the 23d day of August of 1867, “ came the parties by their attorneys, and issue being joined, a jury came to try said issue joined,” &c. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for the sum of three hundred dollars, upon which verdict judgment was rendered in due form, to reverse which the present writ of error is prosecuted.
There are three assignments of .error.
1. The court below erred in sustaining the demurrer of plaintiff to the fourth plea of defendant.
2. The court below erred in sustaining the demurrer of plaintiff to the second plea of the defendant.
3. The court below erred in the judgment entered up in said . case in said court.
The sole question presented for the consideration of this
In the case of Frazer v. Robinson & Daniel, at the present term, we have held that where a contract based on Confederate money, as the consideration, had been executed, this court could not disturb it, and that it was a good and valid consideration in all such cases.
The sale in this case being complete, and the contract of sale entirely executed, the relation of vendor and vendee no longer' existed between the parties, but that of bailor and bailee without reward; which imposed on Beauchamp the use of ordinary care and diligence.
"We are of opinion that the ruling of the Circuit Court in sustaining the demurrers of the plaintiff below to the pleas of the defendant, was correct. The defendant having confessed the demurrer as to the third plea, no question can arise here as to the sufficiency of that plea.
Under the existing state of pleadings and the record before us, the only question was one of fact alone for the jury to determine; and the jury having passed upon that, and there being no motion for a new trial, and no bill."of exceptions bringing the facts before this court, we are bound to presume that the verdict of the jury and the judgment.of the court founded thereon are correct.
Judgment affirmed.