30 Ga. 423 | Ga. | 1860
By the Court.
delivering the opinion.
This was an action brought in Bryan Superior Court, by Sarah Davis, against John Hobbs, to recover damages of the defendant for, and on account of his having withdrawn from the possession of the plaintiff, in the month of May, 1858, a negro woman which he had hired to her at the beginning of that year, to make a crop that year. The jury assessed the plaintiff’s damages at one hundred and twenty-five dollars, with costs.
No motion having been made for a new trial, of course there can be no exception upon which error can be assigned in this Court, that the verdict was contrary to the evidence. The only errors that can be legitimately assigned, are upon the charges of the Court.
In order to understand the points raised and decided in this case, it is indispensably necessary to state the testimony. Josiah Davis, the brother of the plaintiff, testified, that the
Mrs. Hobbs, a daughter-in-law of the defendant, swore, that she was present when the contract was made. The plaintiff was to have Edy for one month, at eight dollars, and any time after that, that defendant might want said negro woman, she was to come home. This was distinctly agreed upon by the parties. The contract was made at the dwelling house of Josiah Davis, in Bulloch county;' and there was no one present at the time but witness, plaintiff and defendant.
The testimony being closed, the Court, after argument, charged the jury, that the testimony being conflicting, it was their duty to reconcile it, if possible; that the only way this could be done, was by supposing there were two contracts, and it was for the jury to ascertain from the evidence which was made last.
As to the measure of damages for the breach of the com tract, the Court charged the jury, that the measure of damages was not simply what such a negro would hire for, for the purpose of profit, and that a negro taken from the crop in May or June, the grassy season of the year, is more valuable than the average value of the negro for the whole year. This charge was in response to a request from defendant’s
The Court further charged the jury, that when a negro is hired for farming purposes, -and no time is set for the termination of the contract for hire, that the law implies a hiring for the year.
1. There being an irreconcilable conflict in the testimony, upon the supposition that the witnesses are equally credible, as to thdSerms of the contract, the violation of which is the subject-matter of this suit, as well as to the persons present when it was made, we think the Court perhaps suggested the only mode of escaping from the dilemma, to-wit: by supposing that the two witnesses, Josiah Davis and Mrs. Hobbs, testified to different transactions, which might have occurred the same day — the one at the house and the other at the store; and that, in that event, the last must prevail.
2. The Court was clearly right in refusing to recognize the rule requested to be given in charge by defendant’s counsel, as the proper criterion for the assessment of damages in this case, namely: the average value of such a negro by way of hire for the year. The plaintiff’s crop was lost by the wrongful act of the defendant. Had the defendant shown— and it was incumbent upon him to make this proof — that the plaintiff could, in the exercise of ordinary diligence, have substituted another servant and thus have prevented the loss of' her crop, it might have gone in mitigation of damages.
As it was, the true criterion of damages was, perhaps, the hire of the negro, the rent of the land and all the expense incurred, and actual loss sustained by the misconduct of the defendant, rather than the conjecture of the witness, as to what the crop would have been worth. But inasmuch as the jury found less, by twenty-five dollars, than the amount sworn to by Josiah Davis and only about that sum more than the price agreed to be paid for the woman, and no motion was made for a new trial on account of the verdict, we do not deem it best to procrastinate the litigation by sending the case back.
3. It is complained that the Court erred in charging the jury, that where no time is fixed, that the law presumes that where a slave is hired for plantation purposes, it is hired for the year.
Let the judgment be affirmed.