Plaintiff sold and delivered to defendant two mules, in exchange for a mare and his cheek for $170, delivered to plaintiff by defendant. It is averred in the petition and admitted by defendant that at the time the contract of sale or exchange was made, defendant warranted the mare to be sound in in every particular and that in reliance upon this warranty plaintiff was induced to purchase the mare in exchange for the mules and to hand over his check for the money. Averring that these representations and warranties as' to the soundness were false, in that the mare was stiff and broken down in her hind parts and afflicted with stringhalt, these, it is alleged, being incurable diseases, in consequence whereof the mare was practically valueless and that she was so at the time she was delivered to plaintiff hy defendant, and averring that plaintiff had offered to rescind and had tendered defendant the mare and the check and had demanded and requested the return to him of the mules, and that defendant had refused to return the mules or to accept the mare and the check, and averring that the value of the mules was $395, and charging that defendant had converted them to his own use, plaintiff
In the answer, admitting the trade and the terms as set out, and that at the time of making the trade, he warranted the mare to be sound, defendant denied all other allegations in the petition.
There was a trial before the court and a jury and at its conclusion a verdict for the amount claimed, $395, was returned, judgment following. Plaintiff filed a motion for a new trial in due time and also within due time filed a supplemental motion alleging newly discovered evidence, undue familiarity by plaintiff- toward the jury when on the witness stand, and that by reason of his having been of the regular panel, he had an undue intimacy with the jury. In a supplemental motion to the supplemental motion, filed five days after the rendition of the judgment, newly discovered evidence is averred. The parties filed affidavits pro and con as to these matters. The court overruled the motions, from which action of the court defendant, saving exception, duly perfected his appeal to this court.
It may be said of this case as of all other cases involving horse and mule trades, that the evidence was very conflicting. Learned counsel for defendant, now appellant, recognizing the rule under "such circumstances, make no attack on the verdict as not supported by evidence..
The errors assigned are to the giving of an instruction at the instance of plaintiff in the following words:. “The court instructs the jury that even though you find from the evidence that the plaintiff, after the trade in question, offered to sell said mare and represented her to he sound, yet if you further find from the evidence that said mare was not sound at the time of the making of the trade in question; and if you further find from the evidence that at the time of said trade no obvious defect in said mare was discovered
The particular error assigned is to the inclusion in this instruction of the words which we have italicized.
Further error is assigned to the overruling of the motion for new trial in the light of the affidavits filed by appellant.
No objection is made to the first instruction given at the instance of plaintiff. It covers the whole case, as we think, correctly.
At the instance of defendant the court instructed the jury that defendant admits that he represented the mare in question to be sound at the time he traded her to plaintiff but that before plaintiff could recover in the case the burthen was upon him to prove to the reasonable satisfaction of the jury that the mare was unsound at the time he got her from defendant, and unless plaintiff had so proven by the greater weight of the credible testimony in the case, the verdict must be for defendant.
This instruction was also given at the instance of defendant: “If the'jury believe from the testimony in the case that the mare in question was sound at the time plaintiff got her from defendant, then you are instructed that the plaintiff cannot recover; and this is true no matter if the mare thereafter became unsound, and no matter how soon thereafter she became unsound.”
Another instruction asked and given at the instance of defendant was as to the credibility of the witnesses.
Citing authorities in support of the assignment of error to that part of the instruction given at the in
Nor will we interfere with the action of the learned Trial judge in overruling the motion for a new trial. The alleg’ecl discovery of new evidence, which is set out in the second supplemental motion, cannot be considered, for that motion was filed five days after the rendition of the judgment. The original motion for new trial and the supplemental motion for that were filed within the four days allowed by law and were properly considered, but the determination of these matters is so much within the discretion of the circuit judge who tried the case, that the fact that he had before him the regular panel from which the parties had selected the trial jury, as well as that jury, incline us not to disturb the conclusion of that judge in refusing to set aside the verdict for the reasons set out in ex parte affidavits, or for any other assigned causes. One of the grounds strongly insisted on in support of this motion for a new trial is that plaintiff was himself a member of the regular panel of the jury at that term and that it was a natural inference that his relations with the jurors were so close as to prejudice and bias them in his favor. It is to be assumed that The learned counsel for appellant were aware of that fact when the members of that panel were called into the jury box and a jury was to be selected. It was within the power of counsel, if they thought that plaintiff, for that reason, would have an undue influence on the panel, to have challenged the array on that ground. Nothing of that kind was done. It is too late, after taking the
As to the ground of newly discovered evidence, we do not suppose that a horse or mule trade was ever tried in any of the courts of the land in which, after verdict either way, a multitude of witnesses could not be found who would come forward and by affidavit' depose that they knew all about the ease and that the verdict was wrong.
To repeat, we see no reason to interfere with the action of the trial court in this matter. The judgment is affirmed.
