18 Ala. 441 | Ala. | 1850
The first question is, whether upon the trial of a contest between the plaintiff and the garnishee, upon an appeal from a justice of the peace, the court may look to the original papers, and the copy of the judgment, entered upon the justice’s docket, and certified by him to the Circuit Court, for the purpose of determining whether the plaintiff had obtained a judgment against the original debtor.
The statute requires the justice, when an appeal is taken within the prescribed time, to send up to the clerk of the court, to which the appeal is taken, a statement of the case, with all the papers and the bond thereunto belonging. — Clay’s Dig. 314, § 9. By the ilth section, (page 315,) it is provided, that when
2. Several objections were taken to the deposition of one Mabry, respecting the regularity of taking it, but as the bill of exceptions does not set out the affidavit, commission, or deposition, or show that the grounds of the objection were sustained by them, we cannot revise the action of the primary court upon them. We may, however, observe that the objections, so far as they are disclosed by the record, have no force in them; that it was proper to make the affidavit of the materiality of the testimony, &c., before the clerk of the court, where the suit was pending (Clay’s Dig. p. 64-5, 1, 2, 3;) — that the commission directed the commissioner to take the deposition “ on tomorrow,” the commission bearing a specified date, was regular; and the fact that the commissioner was not sworn furnished no reason for rejecting the deposition, as the statute does not require them to be sworn.
3. As proof of indebtedness on the part of Wolfe to Tucker, the plaintiff below introduced testimony to show that Wolfe had employed Tucker to go to the State of Mississippi, and to take and bring to him at Mobile three negro slaves, claimed by Wolfe as his property, but which were then supposed to be in the possession of some one in the State of Mississippi; and that for this service he agreed to give Tucker one of said slaves, or a sum equal to one-third the value of them. It was shown that Tucker had succeeded in taking and bringing to Mobile two of said slaves, and that afterwards Wolfe and Tucker obtained posses
4. It was also showm that after the slaves came to the possession of Wolfe, one McRea obtained possession of them from him by action of detinue. The court was asked to charge that if the slaves had been taken out of the possession of Wolfe, before the service of the garnishment, then the plaintiff could not recover. This charge the court refused, and we think, very properly; for if Tucker had complied with his contract, or its full execution had been waived by Wolfe, and he had only partially executed it, he could not be deprived of his compensation by the act of a third party, to which he was in no wise privy.
5 &6. Therewassomeevidence,tendingtoprovethatthecontract between Wolfe and Tucker was entire, and that the latter had only partially complied with it — had taken and delivered two only of the three slaves, which he engaged to deliver to Wolfe. Without expressing any opinion as to the weight this evidence would be entitled to before the jury, we think it was sufficient to authorise the counsel for the defendant below to ask the court to charge, “ that if the contract was entire, to take and
7. Such contracts may become several by the consent of the parties, either express or implied. Ordinarily, the acceptance of a part performance, without objection, is regarded as a waiver of the entire fulfilment by the other party. As if a person agrees to pay a certain gross sum for three particular slaves, to be delivered by a certain time, and the vendor, from casualty or other cause, is enabled to deliver but two, the acceptance of the two, without objection, is a waiver of the entirety of the contract, and entitles the vendor to recover their ratable value. — Story on Contracts, § 25, and cases cited in notes. But I apprehend we must look to the nature of the contract, the manner in which it is to be performed, as well as to the subject matter of it, to ascertain the effect of a partial performance upon the rights of the parties growing out of it. Where the contract provides for the delivery of ponderous articles, which according to the custom of the country are to be delivered in parcels, or by wagon loads, in such case, though the party may accept a portion thereof in the course of delivery, he is not bound to pay until the whole is delivered. — McGehee v. Hill, 1 Ala. 140. So in the case before us, considering the nature of the undertaking and the character of the property, we think that if the slaves belonged to Wolfe, when two of them were delivered, and were accepted by him, he had the right to receive them, without waiving his
8. But it is insisted that there ‘is no proof that Tucker ever made his election., whether he would take one of the slaves, or a sum in money equal to one third their value, and that consequently, .the interest going to. him cannot be the subject of garnisbmént. To this we repjy that Wolfe is the promissor. The stipulation to let Tucker have one of the negroes, or to pay so much in money, was intended for his benefit, and he, and not Tucker., was the party to make the election. Jf, therefore, the contract was complied with by Tucker, and Wolfe, either by the loss of the slaves by title paramount, or by voluntarily disposing of them in the arrangement of compromise, as deposed to by Judge Dargan, has become disabled from letting Tucker have one of the slaves, this terminates his election, and imposes on him the obligation to pay the monied compensation, for which indebitatus assumpsit will lie. So also, if the entire contract was waived, and a partial performance accepted on the part of Wolfe, whereby a right of action accrued to recover a reasonable compensation, then the process of garnishment lies to subject the demand to the satisfaction of Tucker’s indebtedness.
Let the judgment be reversed and the cause remanded.