19 Ala. 101 | Ala. | 1851
Without alluding to the form of the pleadings, I will content myself with stating the facts presented by them, and which give rise to the question of law that we must decide. The defendant, Hooks, hired of the plaintiff a female slave for the year 1847, and gave the note declared on
It is very clear, that one who hires a slave, or any other chattel, cannot dissolve the contract of hiring, or relieve himself from the payment of the hire, by a conversion of the chattel during the term. But if he violates the obligations of his contract of hiring, and destroys the chattel, we think it equally clear that tbe owner is not bound to wait until the time of hiring is expired, but may abandon the contract, and sue in trover. He is not, however, compelled to do so; he may wait until the term of hiring is expired, and sue for the hire, as well as for a failure to return the chattel hired. But if he brings trover either before or after the term of hiring is expired, and recovers the; value of the chattel at the date of the conversion, and the recovery is satisfied, the title of the chattel must then be considered as vested in the defendant from the time of the conversion; for the rule is well settled, that a recovery and satisfaction in the action of trover vest the title of the chattel in the defendant from the time of the conversion.—White v. Martin, 1 Por. 215; Hepburn v. Sewell, 5 Har. & J. 211.
It will follow, I think, that the contract of hiring must be considered as dissolved, from the time the title vests absolutely in the party who first hired, and- then converted the chattel, and from that time the plaintiff cannot recover hire. But it may be urged, that this view would preclude the plaintiff from recovering in assumpsit for the hire of the slave, after a recovery in trover, although the damages were assessed, not according to the value of the slave at the time of the conversion, but at the time the slave should have been returned to the owner. This question I will not decide, because it is not absolutely necessary.
The ruling of the court does not contravene the law, and the judgment must be affirmed.