Stearns v. Warner

2 Aik. 26 | Vt. | 1827

Hutchinson, J.

after stating the case, delivered the following opinion of the Court.

From the foregoing statement of facts, there is no doubt but the plaintiff in error, the original defendant, is liable for the return of the horse upon his contract, or order, as it is termed, and if the plaintiff has not the order, or if Carpenter or the defendant has the possession of it, that can have no other effect than to entitle the plaintiff to secondary testimony to prove Steams1 contract with him.

It is equally certain, that Carpenter has converted the horse, so that trover would lie against him. If Warner would contend that Stearns is liable in trover, it must be on the ground that the circumstances of the case afford a presumption that he, Stearns, was intentionally conniving at the fraud of Carpenter. — See 1 Chit. Pl. 155, and 3 Camp. R. 299.

It was the province of the jury to weigh all circumstances submitted to them under the direction of the Court, and which tended to prove such connivance, and to draw the fact of connivance, as an inference from the facts proved, if sufficient were proved. The facts detailed in the exceptions would seem not to have been sufficient, without some addition; such as that Stearns knew that Carpenter was going off with the horse, or some other pertinent addition to the testimony. Perhaps there was sufficient testimony, in this case, for it is not certified that the testimony detailed is all that went to the jury. Nor does it *28appear by the case, what the charge of the Court was. The case states, that the judge did not charge as requested by the counsel of Stearns. It would not have been correct to charge exactly so. The request assumes the position, that Stearns was liable only by reason of his collateral contract for the return of the horse. This might or might not be so, as the jury should find the facts to be. As, therefore, the charge requested would not have been correct, a refusal so to charge was not error. For aught that appears in the bill of exceptions, the judge may have given a correct charge to the jury. For aught that there appears, there might have been sufficient testimony to have warranted the verdict that was given.

J. P. Richardson, for the plaintiff in error. L. B. Hunt and Benj. Swift, for the defendant in error.

The plaintiff in error complains also of the incorrect admis. sion of a deposition, but the deposition is not spread upon the record, and this Court have no means of ascertaining whether that decision was or was not correct.

The truth is, and so this Court decided several times, a year ago, that the losing party, who would reverse a judgment by the aid of a bill of exceptions, must see to it that the bill contains such facts as show the grounds of every decision in point of law, that the court of errors may see clearly whether those decisions are as they ought to be.

The bill of exceptions in this case is too defective to exclude those presumptions in favour of the judgment of the county court, which are raised by law.

There is, therefore, no error, and the judgment ©f the county court is affirmed, with additional damages and costs.

Prentiss, J. absent, from indisposition.
midpage