3 Port. 126 | Ala. | 1836
The note, upon which the action in this case was founded, was given, for the purchase money of a slave, sold and delivered, by John Og-burn, to Nicholas Ogburn, on the day the note was made." The purchaser has been in possession of the slave, ever since the sale.
The evidence offered, the court refused to admit. Instructions were given by the Court to the jury, as though ihe testimony, which was excluded, had been admitted.
As the instructions were upon an abstract question, and not on one, which arose from facts in the case; this Court has no power to enquire of the cor- ' rectness of. them. . The question here, is, do the facts, which the plaintiff in error offered to prove, constitute a defence to the action?
If they do not, the judgment must stand, because the admission of them, in proof, could not have prevented the judgment; and against such evidence, the defendant in error would be entitled, upon another trial, to a judgment, for the amount due on the note.
The warranty in this case, was an implied one; but the effect of an express, and of an implied warranty, of title, upon a sale of personal property, is the same, and no reason is perceived, why a vendee of a chattel, who continues in the possession of it, should have a cause of action upon his warranty, for a want of title in his veudot — when a grantee of real esiate, in the same circumstances would have no right to maintain a suit, upon a warranty of title.— No principle is more firmly settled,' than that which
A possession which begins in wrong, may continue long enough to exclude all adverse claims. By possession only, he who has it may acquire a title. This effect of possession is produced by the lapse of a much shorter time, upon personal property than on real estate. It is more important, therefore, to - a vendor of a chattel, that his vendee should not voluntarily give the possession of it to an adverse claimant, or hold it for his benefit, than it is to the grant- or of real estate. But, upon authority, there seems to be one difference between such a grantee of real estate and vendee of personal property ; the latter, for want of title in the seller, has a right to an action as soon as he has offered to return the chattel, the former must wait for his eviction.
’ To maintain an action, the plaintiff in it must have done, before the commencement of it, every thing required to give the right to it. The effect of the maintainance of an action to recover back the purchase money, is to rescind the contract; to restore to each party what was his own, before the sale was made. In such an action a judgment may be ren'5 dered for the plaintiff that he recover back the purchase money, but none can be given for the seller that the possession be restored to him. To allow an action for this purpose, before an offer to return the property had been made, would deprive the law of its power to do what it professes to do by its judgment — to rescind the sale. The seller would be without the possession, which was once .his, and would
If an action could be maintained without an offer to return the property, palpable injustice would be the consequence to the vendor. A jury could make him no compensation for the loss of possession, for no accurate calculation of the chances that it would be continued long enough to mature into a title, could be made, and consequently no estimate of the value of the possession, sufficiently probable to authorise the deduction of it from the purchaser’s demand. The offer to return must be made in a reasonable time after the discovery of the want of title.
As a vendee of a chattel, who has paid the purchase money; cannot maintain an action to recover it back, for the want.of title in his vendor, while he has, and is in, the undisturbed possession of the chattel, how can one in the same circumstances prevent a recovery of the purchase money. To sustain the defence would be a rescission of the sale. We think no defence can be made to an action for the purchase money, when the facts relied upon to make it, would not, if the
The objection to the principle, which we recognize, that the purchaser would be liable to the right owner, after he had returned the property, could be made with as great plausibility to the maintenance of an action by a bailor, or landlord against, the bailee or tenant, who can make no defence, upon the ground that the title to the property is in a third son.
The judgment is affirmed.
7 John R. 324; 2 Cain 216; 19 John 77.