1 Ga. 75 | Ga. | 1846
By the Court
Badget, the defendant in error, sold to Broughton, plaintiff in error, a female slave, and executed to him a bill of sale for her, containing a warranty of soundness. The plaintiff in error sold the slave to one Attaway, and endorsed to him the bill of sale which contained the warranty. The bill of sale was under seal, the endorsement was in parol, and in the following words, to wit: “ Jan. 25th, 1844, for full value received I hereby transfer the within bill of sale, made by Plenry Badgett to me, to Chesley Attaway, test., A. T. Scott, and signed John Broughton.”
After the sale of the slave to Attaway, she proving unsound, as was alleged, Broughton brought his action against Badgett on his warranty for damages. In making out his case, the plaintiff tendered in evidence, the bill of sale, with the endorsement. The defendant demurred to the evidence, upon the ground, that the endorsement transferred all right, on the warranty, to Attaway and therefore, Broughton, the plaintiff, could not sue. The demurrer was sustained and the plaintiff submitted to a verdict. Upon this decision the error is assigned. We are therefore called upon to decide whether the bill of sale is itself negotiable, and if it is, whether the endorsement of it to Attaway, gave to him a right of action upon the warranty of Badgett therein contained — which involves the right of Broughton to sue, for it is very clear, that he and his transferee cannot both sue Badgett on his warranty.
The bill of sale being under seal, and the endorsement on it being by parol, if it be a negotiable instrument at all, it may be questioned, whether it can be transferred but by endorsement under seal. We believe that this paper, however, is neither at common law, by the statute of Anne, nor by our own act of 1799, negotiable. The endorsement and delivery of it to Attaway, is evidence of title to the slave, by which Broughton is estopped — by virtue, too, of which Broughton may occupy the same relative position to Attaway, wbich Badgett occupies to him,
They too are liquidated demands. They are made payable in an ascertained and specific amount of property or produce, and are therefore liquidated. Under no view of the subject can we believe that the legislature meant to make a mere right of action negotiable. Mr. Broughton did not, because if desirous, he could not, endorse to Attaway his right of action on this warranty. We think the judge of the court below erred, and that his decision in this cause must be reversed.
Act of 1799, section XXV., referred to in the foregoing decision, is as follows :
“ All bonds, and other specialties and promissory notes, and other liquidated demands, bearing date since the 9th day of June, 1791, whether for money or other thing, shall be of equal dignity, and be negotiable by endorsement, in such manner and under such restrictions as are prescribed in the case of promissory notes. Provided that nothing herein contained shall prevent the party giving any bond, note, or other writing, fr.om restraining the negotiability thereof, by expressing in the body thereof such intention.” — Prin. Dig. 426.