1 Ala. 446 | Ala. | 1840
— The question necessary to be considered is, did the power of attorney from the defendant to Cockburn, confer an authority to warrant the soundness of the slaves to the purchaser?
In Skinner v. Gunn, (9 Porter’s Rep. 305,) this court say “an authority to do an act, must include power to do every thing usual and necessary to its accomplishment. Thus, an agent employed to get a bill discounted, may endorse it in the name of
Upon a sale of personal chattels, the seller impliedly stipulates with the purchaser, that the article sold is his own, and that he will indemnify him for the loss, if the title is in another person: (Ricks v. Dillahunty, 8 Porter’s Rep. 134.) The direction then, in the power of attorney, as to warranting the negroes to be slaves for life, conferred no additional authority upon the agent, as the silent operation of law would by the mere act of sale, have obliged the defendant to make good a defect in the title. And as the legal effect of the power is a mere authority to sell not enlarged by the terms noticed, it'is clear that the maxim relied on, will not lend its influence. To make it applicablé, and thus exclude the warranty of soundness, as an unwarrantable tension of the power granted, it should appear that the manner in which the sale was to be consummated, so far as it related to the warranty, was expressly pointed out, or that the power to warrant, went beyond what the law would imply from the sale itself.
This view being decisive of the case upon its merits, we decline considering the other questions raised upon the bill of exceptions. The judgment is reversed, and the case remanded.