Dean v. Brown
Dean v. Brown
Opinion of the Court
In Hayes v. Woodham, 145 Ala. 597, 40 South. 511, it was said:
“An offer to return the horse in a reasonable time, if there was a breach of the warranty or a fraud practiced on the plaintiff, after the breach or fraud was discovered, is equivalent in its effect upon the remedy to an offer accepted by the seller, and the contract is rescinded. In other words, such an offer made within a reasonable time after a discovery of the fraud or breach of 'warranty was just as effectual to rescind the contract of exchange as if the defendant had accepted it.”
And in the same case is the following quotation from Rand v. Oxford, 34 Ala. 476, here pertinent:
“When the purchaser of a chattel, for a sufficient reason, makes a tender of the property to the seller, with a view to rescission, and the seller refuses to receive it, the purchaser may abandon the property; but he is not bound to do so. He may, if he choose, retain the possession; and in that event he is considered merely the bailee of the seller, and that relation becomes at once the rule and measure of his rights and responsibilities.”
See, also, Comer v. Franklin, 169 Ala. 573 [53 South. 797]; Moline Jewelry Co. v. Crew, 171 Ala. 416 [55 South. 144]; McCoy v. Prince, 11 Ala. App. 388 [66 South. 950].
The few remaining questions will doubtless present no difficulty upon another trial, and are therefore not necessary to be here discussed.
The judgment is reversed, and the. cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
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