120 Ala. 611 | Ala. | 1898
This was an action by appellee against appellant for the conversion of a mule ; and defendant pleaded the general issue, and also two special pleas, setting up, in the first, that he obtained the mule, for the conversion of which he was sued, by an exchange with plaintiff of another mule and $2.50, and that plaintiff retained the mule thus obtained, after all cause, if any, for the rescission- had become known, and that he used said mule as long as he was able to be used. The second plea is substantially the same, with the additional averment that plaintiff used and worked the mule so obtained until he became physically disabled from performing any work. To these pleas, the plaintiff replied specially in these words : 1st. ‘ ‘That on the 26th day of March, 1895, he exchanged or swapped mules with defendant upar Somerville, Ala. That in said exchange or swap and as an inducement to plaintiff to make the same, the defendant represented that the mule he was trading to plaintiff, and which is referred to in said special plea, ‘as which-other mule’ was sound, gentle, and not eight years old. That after the exchange he drove the mule home, and during that evening, and prior to his seeing the defendant on the morning of March 27, 1895, he discovered and ascertained that the said mule was wild, unsound, and about fifteen years of age ; that on the morning of March 27, 1895, he went to the home of defendant, and told him that he, the defendant, had misrepresented said mule, and demanded a rescission of the contract, having with him at the time said mule, and the $2.50 paid by the defendant as boot; that he demanded a rescission on the grounds of misrepresentation of defendant ; that the defendant peremptorily declined to
This conclusion renders unnecessary a review of the findings of the court below on the facts ; or of the rulings on the admission or exclusion of the evidence, as it is not probable the same questions will arise on a future trial.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.