delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an action brought alleging the breach of the following contract, substantially. That plaintiff
The declaration alleges, that in consideration of the above premises, the defendant purchased said judgment at the price of fifty cents on the dollаr, and that the plaintiff had performed his part of the agreement, but defendant had failed, and refused as to his undertaking. An issue was made on these allegations, upon which a trial was had, a verdict rendered-by the jury for defendant under the instructions of the Court, from which an appeal in error to this Court is prosecuted.
The bill of exceptions fails to show that it contains all the evidеnce submitted to the jury, so ^that we need not examine the question as to the weight of the proof, but only see what questions were legitimately raised on the facts, in order to determine the
The- proof on 'the part of the plaintiff makes out his case; the proof on the part of the defendant, tends to show, that the entire mortgage was to be set aside, and in other respects to sustain the opposite of the plaintiff’s case. It further shows, that the bill was filed by plaintiff, аnd sought to have the entire mortgage set aside, but that the decree of the Chancellor only found that about $14,000 of the mortgage debt of Warren was for Confederate money, and that $2,000 of it was Southern Bank notes, the debt being upwards of $16,000, and decreed the mortgage valid as to the $,2000, but invalid as to the balance. His Honoi', the Circuit Judge, charged the jury very accurately on the mаin issue presented. He told the jury in substance, that if the condition precedent to the performance of the contract, was that Wiggins was to file the bill and set aside the' mortgage to -thе extent of the Confederate money embraced in it, and had obtained a decree to that effect, the jury should find for the plaintiff. But on the other hand if they found from the proof, that the dеcree did not set aside the whole of the Warren debt, and the condition was that the whole debt should be set aside, then they should find for the defendant.
Here his Honor might have stopped. It was а plain question of a contract dependent on the condition precedent stated in the declaration, and the simple question was, whether it had been performed
• The doctrine of mutual mistake, which is presented as an integral element on which to base the assumption of impossibility of performance, from which his conclusion is drawn that the jury shоuld find for the
These well settled principles, as we have said, are confounded together by his Honor the Circuit Judge improperly, and in the form presented have no application to the real issues made on the pleadings. The one sold or agreed to sell °his judgments, the other to buy these identical judgments on a certain condition, the only question was, whether the condition had been performed. The only question on which we find difficulty is, whether this error of his Honоr was a mere abstract proposition, or did it necessarily tend to mislead the jury in arriving at their conclusion. As there appears proof in the case, tending to show that it is probablе, that both parties supposed that the entire debt of "Warren was Confederate money, we can see how this part of his charge may have mislead them, by putting the case on an erroneous ground, and leading the jury to find for the defendant because of this fact, when it was not the real question submitted to them by the pleadings in the case. A lawyer would not probably have beеn mislead, a jury might all have been so misled.
As to the question raised by the request of plaintiff, on the assumption that the plaintiff was mislead by the representation of Gill, that the whole of the debt was Cоnfederate money, it .is sufficient to say, that no such question w.as made by the pleadings; no such case having been alleged, therefore, his Honor did not err in refusing to charge as requested, however sound
