18 Ala. 752 | Ala. | 1851
The plaintiff in error sued the defendants in the Circuit Court of Chambers county, to recover the amount of twelve notes, for forty-five dollars each, and one for thirty-six dollars, executed by the defendants and payable to the plaintiff, as administrator of the estate of Martha Brewer. Pleas were interposed, impeaching the consideration of the notes as having failed, and upon the ground of fraud. There was a verdict and judgment for the defendants below, to reverse which the plaintiff has prosecuted his writ of error to this court.
Upon the trial, a bill of exceptions was sealed, from which it appears that the notes sued on were given for the price of a negro woman sold by the plaintiff, as an asset of the estate of Martha Brewer, deceased, and which he had returned as property of said estate in his inventory thereof; that said sale was regularly made by an order of the Orphans’ Court of Randolph county, from which the plaintiff’ derived his appointment, and in a public manner, at auction, as required by the statutes ; that at the time said slave was offered for sale, one James O’Neal was present and forbid such sale, stating publicly that he was the representative of the estate of Edwin O’Neal deceased, and would claim the slave for the benefit of said estate; that'the plaintiff thereupon directed the crier of the property to proceed with the sale; and that pending the sale, said O’Neal publicly staled that he did not wish the claim set up by him for the estate of Edwin O’Neal to injure the sale of the property, that he wanted the slave to bring her full value, and that he would look to the administrator, and hold him responsible for the proceeds of the sale. Shortly after the sale, Hodnett, who became the purchaser, having turned the slave over to Hays, his son-in-law, James O’Neal commenced his action of detinue, as administra
This being substantially the proof in the cause, the plaintiff asked of the court the following charges: That if they, the jury, believed from the evidence that the notes sued on were given for a slave sold by the plaintiff, and that when the slave was offered for sale it was made known to the by-standers, and in the presence and hearing of the defendants, by James O’Neal, who claimed a title to the slave paramount to the plaintiff’s intestate, that there was an incumbrance on the title to the slave, and that the administrator made known to all present that he was only selling the slave as administrator, and would only sell such title as his intestate had to the slave, and would not warrant the title to the purchaser, but that the purchaser would buy at his own risk, then they must find for the plaintiff, notwithstanding the defendants have been dispossessed of the slave by a better title than the title the defendants acquired at said sale.
2. That in sales regularly made by an administrator of the personal property of his intestate under an order of the Orphans’ Court, the law does not imply a warranty of the title to the property sold, and the purchaser buys at his own risk; and that not
These charges the court refused to give, and the plaintiff excepted, and here insists upon their legality. Having thus fully stated the case, out of which the points before us arise, let us proceed to examine into the propriety of the charges.
In respeet of sales generally, the seller of personal property impliedly stipulates that the article sold is his own, and that he will indemnify the purchaser for the loss which may result from want of title, but no such implied warranty of title exists as against administrators and other trustees, who make sales in their fiduciary capacity. An exemption from personal responsibility on account of such implied warranty is deemed indispensable in such cases, for were the law otherwise, every one might be detered from the acceptance of an office, in the exercise of the duties of which he might be compelled to make sales, and subjected to great personal hazzard and loss from a failure of title. Mocklues, adm’r, v. Gardner & Wife, 2 H. & Gill’s Rep. 176. But in the case before us, it is not necessary to show that such exemption does exist, for testing this case by the rules of law, which apply ordinarily to sales of chattels made by individuals on their own account, we feel satisfied that the first charge asserts the law correctly. The seller may be held responsible for a failure of title, first, where there is an express warranty, secondly, where the law implies a warranty, from the circumstances of the case, or the nature of the thing sold, and thirdly, where the seller has made some fraudulent representation, or has been guilty of concealment, in respect to some matter constituting a material inducement to the purchase, and whereby the purchaser was deceived to his injury. — Story on Sales, § 349. The case at bar falls within neither of these sources of liability; for there was, besides the character in which the plaintiff sold, an express declaration by him, as the charge supposes, that he would not warrant the title — that he proposed selling only such title as his intestate had at the time of her death. She
For the error in refusing 'to charge as asked, the judgment must be reversed, and the cause remanded.