27 Ind. 163 | Ind. | 1866
This was a suit by the appellee against the appellant, for the specific performance of a contract for the conveyance of a lot in Bichmond.
The contract was one by which Barry had the privilege of purchasing the lot at $1,500, within a year from October
It was alleged in the complaint, that in August, 1865, the plaintiff notified the defendant of his election to make the purchase; that on the 15th of September, of the same year, he made a tender of the purchase money and demanded a conveyance, which was refused, and that a tender was again made in December following, and a conveyance again demanded, which was refused; that the plaintiff has ever since been ready, &c.;_ that relying upon the performance, by the defendant, of his contract, the plaintiff made improvements on the lot of the value of $>1,500. The general denial was filed. The issue was tried by the court and found for the plaintiff, and a decree thereupon rendered for the plaintiff’.
The error assigned is upon the overruling of a motion for a new trial. Various questions are necessary to be determined in order to reach a conclusion as to the correctness of the action of the court on the motion.
A mulatto who had comé into the State in defiance of the thirteenth article of the State constitution was offered by the' defendant as a witness, and his evidence was excluded, the plaintiff being a white man, and the defendant a mulatto. The trial was had in August, 1866.
By the act of February 14, 1853, (Acts 1853, p. 60,) the witness would have been incompetent. By the act of December 20,1865, (Acts Spec. Ses. 1865, p. 162,) color as a test of the cornpetency of a witness was removed, “provided that no negro or mulatto who has come, or who shall hereafter come, into this State,’ in violation of the thirteenth article of the constitution of the State shall, while, said article continues in force, be competent to testify as a witness in any case in which a white person shall be a party in interest.”
By the act of Congress of the 9th of April, 1866, it is provided, “ that all persons born in the United States, and not subject to any foreign power, excluding Indians not
In Smith v. Moody et al., 26 Ind. 299, this court held that, the thirteenth article of the constitution was void, being in conflict with the second section of article four of the Constitution of the United States.
It is urged that the legislature recognized the validity of this article in the proviso above set forth, and contemplated some action to declare it void, before the disability of color would be removed, as to persons -coming into this State in violation of its provisions. If this were so, then Congress, in the opinion of the writer, by the statute-above cited, has taken that action. But I think that the article being void, the proviso, by its terms, fails. One cannot violate that which never had a ‘legal- existence. But as this point is not material, a majority of the court decline to decide it. •
The evidence is in the record. On the 19th of September, 1864, at the city of Richmond, in this State, Turner and Parry entered into the written contract set out in the complaint. The contract was drawn by one Bell, a real estate agent, who was at the time employed by Turner to act as his agent in -renting and selling other property in the city. Immediately after making the contract, Turner left this State and returned to Kansas, where he resided at the time, and did not again come into this State until December, 1865. Parry introduced testimony at the trial tending to show that it was understood at the time the contract was made
We think the conduct of Turner in refusing performance, and in denying the contract, made the question of tender to Bell immaterial, and that if the court below committed an error in rejecting the witness offered, that error was harmless. When a party to an agreement gives notice to the other of his-determination not to perform the contract on his part, performance by the party receiving such notice
The judgment is affirmed, with costs.