44 Pa. Super. 81 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1910
Opinion by
The plaintiff, in January, 1902, at Dublin, Virginia, delivered to the defendant a stallion to be sold by the latter upon commission. The horse was to be taken by the defendant to his place of business in Huntingdon county, Pa., and there sold if a satisfactory price could be obtained. Reynolds, under the provisions of the written agreement, was to sell the horse “at a price that he deems fit so that the colt shall pay to D. M. Cloyd the full sum of five hundred dollars and whatever part of the profits over that amount is mutually satisfactory.” “In case of the death of the colt the said Reynolds shall not be held responsible for the $500, and the said D. M. Cloyd shall not be held responsible for any expense incurred on the colt.” The oral evidence established that Reynolds took the horse to Huntingdon county, Pa., and there, on February 4, 1902, sold him to Trexler Bros, for the sum of $700 and received the purchase money for him. The plaintiff brought this action to recover the price of the horse on April 9, 1908. The court below upon the trial held that the statute of limitations was a bar to plaintiff’s claim and entered a judgment of compulsory nonsuit which it subsequently refused to take off.
The plaintiff testified at the trial that the defendant had never informed him that the horse had been sold. He
The judgment is reversed and a venire facias de novo awarded.