Leaird v. Davis
Leaird v. Davis
Opinion of the Court
This was, an action of trespass brought by the defendant in error against the plaintiffs for forcibly seizing and carrying away divers slaves and other personal chattels of the defendant. Plea, not guilty; verdict and judgment for the,plaintiff below.
A bill of exceptions was sealed upon the trial, from which it. appears that the plaintiff below showed that the property upon which the trespass had been committed was in liis possession under a contract of hiring for the year 1848- The defendants then showed that while the plaintiff was thus m possession, the defendant Leaird made with the plaintiff a contract as follows: “Eufaula, Jan’y 10th, 1848. This is to certify that I have this day hired to L. J. Leaird eight negroes, namely, Philip, Charity, Mike, Bill, Boy, 01, Fann and Price, and the service of me as overseer and laborer for this year, for the sum of four hundred dollars, and am to furnish my own meat and bread, and two horses, one yoke of oxen and cart, for the use of the farm— (signed) — Bbnj. A. Davis”; and proved that the defendant in error went upon the farm and with the said slaves commenced
We have no hesitation in pronouncing this an entire contract. See Story on Contr. (2 edit.) §§ 21-2-3; see, also, Nesbitt et al. v. Drew, at the present term, and cases there cited. The effect of the contract is to vest in Leaird the ownership of the slaves hired by Davis to him for and during the term for which they were hired, as also the other property which passed by the same contract. — Rix, adm’r, v. Dillahunty, 8 Por. Rep. 133. The title having thus vested, was not divested by Leaird turning Davis off for a cause admitted to be sufficient, for if the cause justified Leaird’s act, he was guilty of no violation of the contract, and certainly Davis cannot avail himself of his own violation in failing to comply with it, to re-vest himself with the property and defeat the right which had vested in Leaird and which he was unwilling to surrender. Suppose Leaird had paid him the $400 in fulfilment of the contract on his part, and
This short statement of the law which must govern the case, shows the Circuit Court entirely misconcieved the rights of the parties growing out of the contract and as affected by their subsequent conduct. The judgment must therefore be reversed and the cause remanded.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- LEAIRD v. DAVIS
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- 1 case
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- Syllabus
- 1. D. and L. entered into a contract, by which the former, in consideration of $400, agreed to hire to the latter for a year certain slaves, and to superintend them as an overseer, and work as a laborer. Poon after D. had delivered the slaves and entered on the performance of his contract, L., for good and sufficient cause, discharged him from his service. D.s when he left, carried the slaves off with him, and L. with another went ' in pursuit and retook the slaves, whereupon D. sued them in trespass:— ' Hid — 1st. That the contract vested the title to the slaves in L.; and although the hiring of the slaves'and of D. as an overseer was an entire ■ contract, L.’s title to the slaves was not divested by the discharge of D. , from his service. 2d. That D. having no right to take the slaves, L. was not guilty of a trespass in peaceably reclaiming the possession.