Plaintiff’s petition is as follows: “Plaintiff states that in June, 1892, he purchased of defendant a certain bay mare seven years old and paid defendant therefor $250; that defendant represented and warranted that said mare was sound and suited for the purposes for which plaintiff purchased the same; that plaintiff purchased said mare for driving purposes, relying upon the representations of the defendant that she was sound and of high bred trotting stock; that said mare was not sound, as defendant represented, but had weak eyes, which finally resulted in partial blindness, and at times was and is totally blind, all of which was at the time of said sale well known to the defendant and unknown to this plaintiff; that plaintiff, as soon as he discovered that the mare was unsound in the particulars aforesaid, offered to return the same to the said defendant, which he then and there refused; that said mare, by reason of said unsoundness, was not and is not worth more than $60. Wherefore, plaintiff says that he has sustained damages in the sum of $190, for which he asks judgment, to which the defendant filed a general denial.”
