19 Ala. 252 | Ala. | 1851
This was an action on the cáse for deceit in the sale of a. slave. The questions presented for our revision arise upon certain instructions which were given by the court to the jury, and which are set out in the bill of exceptions. The hotter to- comprehend the points of law involved in the charges-
It appears that on the 5th day of February, 1819, the slave in controversy was sold under a mortgage, made by one Adam Benbow, to secure a debt due to the Branch of the Bank of the State of Alabama at Montgomery, and at said sale, which was by public auction, the said slave was bid in by John Whiting, who was at the time the agent and assistant commissioner of said Branch Bank. On the day after the sale, Whiting sold the slave to the defendant, Ware, for five hundred and fifty dollars, being an advance upon the price at which he had bid him in, and which sale was private; Ware agreeing to give his note to the bank on account of which the sale was made, after the sale; but on the same day, Ware came to Whiting and said that the boy was unsound, having a defect in one eye, to which Whiting replied, ho expected this was not so, as Benbow said he was sound, and nothing was the matter with him. That upon an examination, they found one of his eyes defective, but Ware nevertheless did not object to him, or to complying with his contract. About two weeks afterwards, however, Ware called on Whiting, and said he would not comply, because he was told by one of his negroes that the boy had had a fit, and he had learned was subject to them, and that Benbow had told him the slave was subject to spasms when he had eaten any thing that disagreed with him; that although Benbow thought they were spasms occasioned from eating, he, Ware, thought they were fits, and that the negro was unsound therefrom, and asked Whiting to rescind the contract, which he refused to do. Thereupon, Ware tendered the negro back to Whiting, calling upon a witness to notice the tender, and demanded a rescisión, which Whiting refused. On the first Monday in March, 1849, Ware again called on Whiting in regard to the negro, and desired him to rescind the contract, which Whiting says he refused to do, unless the arrangement hereafter to be stated amounted to such rescisión.
In the interview last alluded to, Ware said the difficulty could be settled, if the bank would take back the negro and sell him, and Ware would pay the difference between the price he was to pay, and the price the slave should sell for. This Whiting refused to do. Ware then said, if Whiting would sell the
The auctioneer had an indistinct recollection that ho announced when selling, that he had previously sold the same slave, but •the witnesses who were present did not recollect that such declaration was made. It appeared, however, he was sold without warranty, not stating whether of title or soundness.
The evidence further showed that all sales made under mortgages to the bank were without warranty. Ware was present at the sale, and procured a person to bid against the other bidders, who at his request bid $540, and then ceased bidding.
It was also in evidence, that after the sale to Gilmer, the negro was delivered to him, and when he came to pay the money, Whiting said to him, that he was sorry he, Gilmer, had bought the negro, and then disclosed to him the previous sale, and all that had passed between him and Ware in regard to the unsoundness of the negro. Gilmer replied, that he supposed he had been buying at his own risk, and also said, that if what Ben-bow had said was true, the negro was a cheap bargain, and if what Ware said was true, he would send the negro up to some of the negro traders in Montgomery, and get them to sell him; and he then paid the money to Whiting.
It was proved that Ware was a physician; but there was no other evidence of his knowledge of the unsoundness of the slave than is above set forth. It was also shown that if the negro had been sound when sold to Gilmer, he would have been worth $100; that he was subject at that time to fits or spasms, which attacked him periodically, and deteriorated from his value, and that on the 21th day of March, 1849, Gilmer tendered the negro back to Ware, on account of such unsoundness.
This charge, we think, cannot be supported as a legal proposition. It is very certain that Whiting refused to exonerate Ware from the obligation of the contract to pay $550, and this was the only portion of the contract which remained executory, as the negro had been delivered to Ware, and the contract fully executed by the bank. It is not pretended that Ware was -in any wise discharged from Ids liability to pay the entire purchase money; but on the contrary, his liability remained wholly unimpaired by the subsequent arrangement between him and Whiting. The legal effect of this subsequent arrangement as it is disclosed by the proof, was not the cancellation of the prior contract, but it merely afforded Ware the opportunity of having the slave sold, perhaps for a better price than he could otherwise have sold him. In other words, it was a lending of the name of the bank by Whiting to effect a sale of the slave under the mortgage of Benbow for the benefit of Ware. As an illustration of this proposition, suppose the slave had sold for a mere nominal sum; Ware would still have been bound to pay the price originally agreed on. Suppose that after the arrangement for his re-sale, and before it could be affected, the slave had died, it is clear, the loss would have fallen on Ware, and not on Whiting or the bank. The re-sale was then to be at Ware’s risk, the proceeds were to be applied for his benefit, and he alone was the party interested really and beneficially in the subsequent sale. We must look to the nature and substance of the transaction, to determine its true character, and not to the
But it is contended, that although this charge may have been incorrect, yet when taken in connection with the whole of the evidence, no injury resulted from it to the plaintiff in error. The rule is, as we have often asserted it, that where the entire record affirmatively shows that the plaintiff below never can recover, and the matter which renders a recovery impracticable is obvious and undisputed, the court will not reverse for other errors. A reversal in such case would not only be useless, but become the means of unnecessarily agumenting the costs.—Brook v. Young, 4 Ala. R. 584; Marshall v. Betner, 17 ib. 832. VWro we to concede, that the facts set out in this bill of exceptions show that the plaintiff ought not to have recovered, yet we must go farther, and presume what the bill of exceptions does not show, that the facts before us were all that wore proved in the cause upon the trial below, and are all that can be proved upon a subsequent trial.
Without entering into a particular examination of the other charge which the court gave, and the charge prayed for by the counsel for the plaintiff and refused, it will be sufficient for the future conduct of the cause to state the law as applicable to them.
We think it too clear to admit of argument, that if before the contract was consummated by Gilmer, by the payment of the price to Whiting, the latter informed Mm of the facts and circumstances which he now insists constitute a fraud upon him, and he nevertheless elected to consummate the contract, and paid the purchase money, such circumstances must be considered as though they had been known to him at the time of his purchase, and the deceit which they tend to establish regarded as
It results from what we have said, that the second charge given, when construed in connection with the evidence, was correct, and the charge refused, being substantially the reverse of that given, was properly rejected.
For the error in giving the first charge, the judgment must be-reversed, and the cause remanded.