29 Ky. 527 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1831
delivered the opinion of the court.
This was an action of covenant prosecuted by Singleton against Carroll and Sayer, on a writing executed by them to him, bearing date 4th January 1828; by which they bound themselves to pay to him for the hire of a negro man, from that time Until Christmas, one hundred dollars, to furnish for said slave the usual summer clothing, and to deliver him with as good clothing as he then wore, to the order of Singleton, in Lexington, at the expiration of the time for which he had hired him.
The breaches assigned in the declaration are, the failure of the defendants to pay the $100, and to deliver the negro at the time stipulated.
Two pleas were filed: 1st. Covenants performed. 2d. That they paid the $100; and that previous to the day on which they were bound to deliver the slave, he had run away from them, without any negligence or fault on their part; and that upon diligent search and inquiry they had not been able to’regain him; and that therefore, they could not deliver on the day named in the covenant sued on, &c.
The only point presented by the assignment of errors worthy of consideration, is the sufficiency of the second plea. For the appellees, it has been contended, that a covenant should never be so strained in its construction, as to make it bear a meaning, which was probably, not in the contemplation of the contracting parties;'and that the one under consideration is not fairly susceptible of such an interpretation, as to render them responsible for the loss of the slave, which had occurred without their fault, and in such a manner as rendered it impracticable for them to have prevented it.
The appellant insists, that in whatsoever light a defence of such a character should be viewed, when relied on against the non-performance of a duty created by law, that it presents no sufficient plea to a covenant like this, in which there is an express undertaking to deliver the slave.
The decision of the question must depend upon the meaining of the parties, for in the construction of covenants,it is certainly proper to look to the intention of the contracting parties, as the governing criterion; so far as it can be ascertained from the whole context of the instrument, ex antecedentibus, et consequentibus. In endeavoring to do this, established principles of decision must not be disregarded. Where the law creates-a duty or charge, and the party is disabled from performing it, without any default on his part, and has no remedy over, the law will excuse him; as in the cases of waste against tenants in dower, by the courtesy, for life and years &c. but where by his •own contract, he imposes upon himself a duty, the general rule is, that he is bound to make it good, notwithstanding an inevitable accident. Thus where a lease, by indenture, was made of a meadow, bounded on one side by a river, and the lessee undertook to sustain and repair the banks, to prevent the water from overflowing them, upon pain of forfeiting a sum
1st. Because a covenant to do this, against an act of God, or an enemy, ought to be so special and ex
2d. Because the defendant had no consideration, no premium for his risk, and it was not in the contemplation of either party; and lastly, because equality is equity, and the loss should.be divided.
The last reason is, to be sure, inapplicable to a court of common law in this state, although properly urged in Pennsylvania, where there was no court of chancery; but the others are applicable in a court of common law, and although we do not regard them as authority, yet, as the opinion of an able judge, they are entitled to much weight.
The case under consideration is one in which the appellees were not prevented from delivering the slave by the act of God, or the incursions of an alien enemy, but by the act of the slave himself; but still, if their plea be true, by an event over which it was as impossible for them to have any control, as it would be for a single individual to control the movements of an hostile army, unless they had caused the slave to be watched day and night, or had exercised a rigor and cruelly by keeping him constantly in chains; and it would be absurd to suppose, that the appellant expected, or that the appellees ever intended to bind themselves to observe such extraordinary diligence, or to practice such detestable cruelty. We are fore of opinion, that there is nothing in the wording of the covenant to justify the conclusion, that the parties, at the time of its execution, understood it as binding the appellees to deliver the slave at the time named, in all events. In the case of Young vs. Bruces, V. Littell, 324, this court decided, that a person who hires a slave, and covenants to return him at the end of the year, is discharged therefrom if the slave, without any fault of the hirer, dies in the mean time; upon the ground that it was not within the contemplation of the contracting parties, and that the covenant ought not to be so construed as to fender the hirer liable in such a case, the writing taining no express stipulation to that effect; and, cause there was not such an inadequacy between what might be supposed to be the value of a year’s service of the slave, and the price agreed to be paid by the
The judgment of the circuit court, must be affirmed with costs.