Jackson v. Waddill

1 Stew. 579 | Ala. | 1828

By JUDGE TAYLOR.

Covenant is a remedy calculated for the recovery of damages for the breach of a contract under seal. a The declaration in this case sets out a contract under seal, which it avers has been broken by the defendants; then covenant certainly might be sustained on this instrument, even were it admitted that a specified sum was payable by it, for damages might be recovered for the breach of it. In that case, it is true, the law would define the amount of the damages, viz, the sum agieed to be paid, with legal interest thereon, but this certainly could not vary the case. There are many instances in which debt and covenant are concurrent remedies; see 1 Chitty’s Pleading 110 and 111. We are there also informed, that an action of covenant has been sustained on a bond, though debt is the usual remedy.

But this is an instrument on which I think the action of debt could not be supported. It is not an alternative *580promise by the defendants, but a positive stipulation to pay current bank notes; for certainly there can be no dif-perence jn an undertaking to pay two hundred dollars, “to ¡jg pai¿'m current hank notes,” or “to be discharged in current bank notes.” In either case it is precisely determined that payment is to be made in current bank notes, and it would be necessary, under foimer decisions of this Court, that a jury should determine what damages the plaintiffs have sustained by the breach of the covenant; and the measure of those damages would be the value of two hundred dollars of current bank paper in specie, at the time the instrument matured, with interest thereon.

On the last point, a majority of the Court are with me, but we unanimously agree that the action is not misconceived.

Reversed and remanded.

Judge Crenshaw not sitting.

i cutty’s rp