2 Blackf. 123 | Ind. | 1828
According to the statute, the defendant may plead to an action on a specialty like the present, the want or failure of the consideration, or of any part of it. Tbe plaintiffs contend, that where there is a plea of a total failure of consideration, under this statute, the whole plea must be proved, or the defence amounts to nothing. In this we think he is mistaken. If the defendant under bis plea suitable to the case, of a total failure of consideration, prove, in addition to the fraudulent
The judgment is affirmed with costs.
R. C. 1824, pp. 294, 295. The act of 1831 is the same as that of 1824, atici is as follows: “In any action founded upon any specialty or other contract (conveyances of real estate and instruments negotiable by the law merchant excepted,) the defendant, by special plea, may allege the want or failure of the consideration or any part thereof, of such specialty or other contract; and if any specialty or other contract (excepting as aforesaid) is alleged in any other stage of the proceedings, the other party may aver in answer and prove on trial, the want or failure of the consideration in the whole or part, of such specialty or other contract, and whenever such specialty or other contract shall be given in evidence, without being pleaded, the other party may (excepting as aforesaid) prove the want or failure of the consideration or part thereof, of such specialty or other contract'.” R. Cl, 1831, p. 405.
Assumpsit on a promissory note. Plea’, non-assumpsit; except as to 'a certain SuAi, and as to that a tender. A notice was attached to the plea of matter intended to be given in evidence, viz. that the consideration of the nóte declared on was the making of a quantity of provision barrels by the plaintiff for the defendant, under an agreement to manufacture the same so that they would pass inspection under the law regulating the inspection of beef and pork; that a portion of the barrels were manufactured in an unskilful manner, and not in compliance with the terms of the contract, whereby the defendant lost the sale of the same. On the trial, the defendant offered to prove the facts set forth in his notice. The evidence was objected to, and the objection sustained. Verdict for the plaintiff. The Supreme Court, on a motion for a new trial, said, that in Beecker v. Vrooman, 13 Johns. R, 302, it is settled, that deceit in the sale of a chattel may be shown in bar, or in mitigation; and that the same principle would admit the defence in the case before the Court, except as to the amount paid into Court. New trial granted. Spalding v. Vandercook, 2 Wend. 431.
Assumpsit in the Common Pleas for, inter alia, 45 dollars, the stipulated price of a cooking stove. The defendant, on the trial, in pursuance of a notice 'attached to his plea, offered to prove that the plaintiff warranted the stove to draw and carry smoke well and to cook well, and that the stove did not draw and carry smoko well; that after every possible experiment made, it was found it would not draw; that the bottom plate was warped, and that the plates did not fit together; that the defendant took the stove to the plaintiff and offered to return it, but that the plaintiff refused to receive it back. It was not pretended that there was any fraud in the sale, but it was insisted that the evidence was admissible as a set-off of damages for the broach of the warranty, and to reduce the amount of the damages. The evidence was objected to, and the
The Court delivered an elaborate opinion in favour of the plaintiff in error, saying; that when the damages arising from a breach of a warranty in the sale of chattels had been allowed to be given in evidence, to reduce the amount of recovery below the stipulated price, the defence was admitted to avoid circuity of action; that a second litigation on the same matter should not be tolerated, where a fair opportunity could be afforded by the first to do final and complete justice to the parties; and that if a defence resting on such a principle was allowed, as they thought it was, in a case.of a warranty mala fide, they saw no good reason for not allowing it in a case of a warranty bona fide. The authorities cited by the Court, not referred to by the counsel, were Leggett v. Cooper, 2 Stark. R. 103.—Frisbee v. Hoffnagle, 11 Johns. 50. Judgment of the Common Pleas reversed. M'Allister v. Reab, 4 Wend. 483. The defendant in error removed the case to the Court of Errors, where, after a full investigation, the •judgment of the Supreme Court was afifiimed. The opinion, expressed in the Court of Errors by the Chancellor, is, that it appeared to be settled in England that, when there has been a sale either upon a warranty as to the goodness of the article sold, or upon a fraudulent misrepresentation of its value, if a suit b'e brought on the original contract of sale, the defendant may, upon notice of such defence given with the general issue, prove the fraud or'breach of warranty in mitigation of damages; and that the law was the same, according to the New-York decisions, although a bill or note be given for the purchase-money. Reab v. M’Allister, 8 Wend. 109. The authorities mentioned by the Chancellor in the case last-cited, not noticed in the cause before the Supreme Court, are Evans v. Grey, 12 Martyn’s R. 478.- Sample v. Looney, 1 Overton’s T. R. 85.—Poulton v. Lattimore, 4 Man. & Ry. R. 208. S. C. 9 Barn. & Cress. 259.
Poulton v. Lattimore, supra, was decided in 1829. It was an action of assumpsit to recover the contract price of a certain quantity of cinq foin seed, warranted to be good new growing seed. Plea, non-assumpsit. It was proved that the seed was not good growing seed; that the defendant had not returned it, but had sowed part and sold the residue; and that the part sold had proved wholly unproductive. Verdict for the defendant. Littledalc, J.—“Where goods are warranted, the vendee is entitled, though 'he do not return them to the vendor, or give notice of their defective quality, to bring
The following case occurred in 1831:—Assumpsit for the price of a horse sold and delivered. Plea, non-assumpsit. Verdict for the defendant. Rule to show cause why the verdict should not be set aside, and a verdict entered for the plaintiff for 43l. The cases cited in support of the rule, not mentioned in the opinion of the Court, are Fielder v. Starkin, 1 H. Bl. 17.—Parker v. Palmer, 4 Barn. & Ald. 387.—Hunt v. Silk) 5 East, 449. Lord Tenterden, C. J.—“The facts of the case were these:— The plaintiff, on the 2d of February, sold the horse to the defendant for 43/., with a warranty of soundness. The defendant took the horse, and on the same day sold it to Bailey for 45/. Bailey, on the following day, parted with it in exchange to Osborne; and Osborne, in two or three days afterwards, sold it to the defendant for 30/. No warranty appeared to have been given on any of the three last sales. The hoise was, in fact, unsound at the time of the first sale; and on the 9th of February the defendant offered to return it to the plaintiff, who refused to accept it. The question for consideration is, whether the defendant, under these circumstances, had a right to return the horse, and thereby exonerate himself from the payment of the whole price?
“Xt is not necessary to decide, whether in any case the purchaser of a specific chattel, who, having had an opportunity of exercising his judgment upon it, has bought it, with a warranty that it is of any particular quality or description, and actually accepted and received it into his possession, can afterwards, upon discovering that the warranty has not been complied with, of his own will only, without the concurrence of the other cbntractingpaity, return the chattel to the vendor, and exonerate himself from payment of the price, on the ground that he has never received that article which he stipulated to purchase. There is, indeed, authority for that position. (Curtis v. Hannay, 3 Esp. R. 82, and 2 Stark. Ev. 645, aie here referred to.) If is, however, extremely difficult, indeed impossible, to reconcile this doctrine with those cases in which it has been held, that where the property in the specific chattel has passed to the vendee, and the price has been paid, he has no right, upon the breach of the warranty, to return the article and revest the property in the vendor, and recover the price as money paid on a consideration which has failed, but must sue upon the warranty, unless there has been a condition in the contract authorising the return, or the vendor has received back the chattel, and has thereby consented to rescind the contract, or has been guilty of a fraud, which destroys the contiact altogether. Weston v. Downes, 1 Doug. 23; Towers v. Barrett, 1 T. R. 133; Payne v. Whale, 7 East, 274; Power v. Wells, 1 Doug. 24, n.; Emanuel v. Dane, 3 Campb. 299, where the same doctrine was applied to an exchange with a warranty, as to a sale, afid the vendee held not to be entitled to sue in trover for the chattel deliveied, by way of barter, for another received. If these cases are rightly decided, and we think they áre, ánd they certainly have been always acted upon, it is clear that the purchaser cannot by his own act alone, unless in the excepted cases above mentioned, l'evest the property in the seller, and recover the price when paid, on the ground of the total failure of consideration; and it seems to follow that lid cannot, by the same means, protect himself from the payment of the piice on the same ground. On the other hand, the cases have established, that the breach of the warranty may be given in evidence in mitigation of damages, on the principle, as it should seem, of avoiding circuity of action, Cormack v. Gillis, cited 7 East, 480; King v. Boston, 7 East, 481, n.; and there is no hardship in such a defence being allowed, as the plaintiff ought to be prepared to prove a compliance with his warranty, which is part of the- consideiation foi the specific piice agreed by the defendant to be paid.
“But whatever may be the right of the purchaser to return such a warranted article in an ordinary case, there is no authority to show that he may return it wheie the purchaser has done more than was consistent with the purpose of trial; where he has exercised the dominion of an owner over it, by selling and parting wjth the property to another, and where he has derived a pecuniary benefit from it. These circumstances concur in the present case; and even supposing it might have been competent for the defendant to re<urn this horse, after having accepted it, and taken it into his possession, if he had never parted with it to another, it appears to us that he cannot do so after the re-sale at a profit.
“These are acts of ownership wholly inconsistent with the purpose of trial, and which are conclusive against the defendant, that the particular chattel was his own; and it may be added, that the parties cannot be placed in the same situation by the return of it, as if the contract had not been made, for the defendant has derived an intermediate benefit in consequence of the bargain, which he would still retain. But he is entitled to reduce the damages, as he has a right of action against the plaintiff for the breach of warranty. The damages to be recovered in the present action have not been properly ascertained by-the jury, and there must be a new trial, unless the parties can agree to reduce the sum for which the verdict is to be entered; and if they do agree, the verdict is,,lo be entered for that sum. Rule absolute on the above term?.” Street v. Blay, 2 Barn. & Adol. 456.