7 N.C. 241 | N.C. | 1819
The presiding Judge nonsuited the Plaintiff; a rule for a new trial being obtained it was sent to this Court.
A few plain principles have been established by many decisions, on the subject of warranty, the application of which to this case will free it from difficulty. As a warranty renders the party subject to all losses arising from a failure of it, however innocent he may be, much caution has been exercised in Courts of Law in creating an obligation of such extent. Hence the rule that on the sale of chattels, there is not any implied warranty, except as to the title; that to constitute a warranty it must be express, and will not be implied by a mere affirmation of the quality or kind of the article sold, nor by a mere affirmation of the value, nor where the subject is of dubious quality, on which common judgment might be deceived. Therefore, when an auctioneer, on the sale of pictures, set in the printed catalogue opposite to each, the name of a painter, it was determined not to amount (243) to a warranty of the picture's being the work of such *187
artist. 2 Rep. 272. In every case upon the sale of a chattel, where there is neither a warranty nor deceit, the buyer purchases at his peril. In the case of Chandler v. Lopez, Cro. Jac., it was determined that for selling a jewel, which was affirmed to be a bezoar stone, when it was not, no action lay, unless the Defendant knew it was not a bezoar stone, or had warranted it to be one. And in Packinson v. Lee, 2 East., 314, it was decided that a fair merchantable price did not raise an implied warranty that if there be no warranty, and the seller sell the thing such as he believes it to be, without fraud, he will not be liable for a latent defect. Lord Coke says, "that by the civil law, every man is bound to warrant the thing that he selleth, albeit there be no express warranty; but the common law bindeth him not, unless there be a warranty in deed or in law." And Fitzherbert, in the Nat. Brev., 94, c. says, "that if a man sell wine that is corrupted, or a horse that is diseased, and there be no warranty, it is at the buyer's peril, and his eyes and his taste ought to be the judges in that case." It appears from all the authorities, that without a warranty by the seller, or fraud on his part, the buyer must stand to all losses arising from latent defects; and a contrary rule is no where laid down. — The principle, on which the common law proceeds, being that the purchaser ought to apply his attention to these particulars which may be supposed to be within the reach of his observation and judgment, and the vendor to communicate those particulars and defects which cannot be supposed to be immediately within the reach of such attention. The purchaser may always provide against his own want of vigilance or skill, by requiring the vendor to warrant. Saying, when the money was paid, that the horse was sound, did not amount to a warranty; to make an affirmation at the time of the sale, a warranty, it must appear by evidence to be so intended, and not to have been a mere (244) matter of judgment and opinion. 3 Term., 57; Carth. 90. Salk. 210. Here the Plaintiff seemed content with the assertion of the Defendant as to the soundness of the horse, though he had been previously advised to take a warranty. If, then, the Defendant asserted only what he believed, and the contrary does not appear; and the Plaintiff chose to run the risk of being able to prove that the Defendant knew of the unsoundness, when he might have procured an indemnity, with or without that knowledge, there is neither hardship nor injustice in throwing the loss on him. The nonsuit must, therefore, stand, and the rule for a new trial be discharged. *188
Cited: Hatchell v. Odom,