8 Port. 428 | Ala. | 1839
— The action for a false warranty is intended not so much to punish the seller, as to compensate the purchaser for any injury he may have sustained ; and in order to a just admeasurement of damages, the proper inquiry in such a case is, what injury has the plaintiff sustained. The deterioration in value, by reason of unsound ness, or other defect, against which the defendant has stipulated, is only important, as furnishing a criterion of damages. What would be sufficient
A plaintiff, in general, is entitled to recover for all losses resulting directly from a breach of the warranty ; so that, in some cases, he may recover even beyond the price he has paid for the thing warranted. —(Borradaile vs. Brunton, 2 Moore’s R. 582; 8 Taunt. R. 535; Lightner vs. Martin, 2 McCord’s R. 214.) Thus, the purchaser of a slave, warranted sound, who has proven entirely valueless, is entitled to be reimbursed, not only the purchase money, but all proper expenditures for medical aid, &c.
To apply this reasoning to the case at bar, if the slave (though unsound at the time of the defendant’s purchase) has been restored to health, so that the only inconveni
The consequence is, that the judgment must be reversed, and the cause remanded.