Stroud v. Mays
Stroud v. Mays
Opinion of the Court
By the Court. —
delivering the opinion.
This was an action on the case, in nature of deceit, by James Stroud, against Henry S. Mays andBeersheba Stroud, in the sale of a negro named Simon. On the trial, there was much testimony adduced on both sides. The Jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff, for $675; and the Court granted a new trial on the sole ground that the verdict was contrary to evidence. And this writ of error is brought to reverse that decision.
By the Civil Law, where there is no fraud and no agreement to the contrary, in case the article proves to be unsound, or different from what both parties supposed it to be, the loss falls on the seller; by the Common Law, it is thrown on the purchaser. The rule in the one code is, a sound price implies sound property. In the other, caveat emptor; the vendor, without express warranty, merely undertaking to make a good title to the vendee,
In the bill of sale to Simon, there is no warranty, and the present action is brought for the breach of an implied warranty, or as it is sometimes denominated, a warranty in law; that is, it charges the unsoundness of the slave, at the time of the contract, the knowledge of that fact by the owners, and its fraudulent concealment, with reason to believe, on the part of the sellers, at the time, that the purchaser trusted them in regard to the matter.
Had the Court the right, in the proper exercise of its discretion, to set aside the verdict of the Jury 1
“ The question,” said Lord Ellenborough, in Carstairs vs. Stein, (4 M. & Selw. R. 192, 199,) “ before us, is not, whether the verdict given in this case, is such as we should, ourselves, have given ; but whether, having been given by a Jury, to whom the whole case was fully left in point of fact, and to whom the law upon the case was distinctly stated, it ought to be set aside, upon the grounds of the argument now suggested to us, viz : that they have drawn an erroneous conclusion ?” lie thought not.
And, said Tilghman, C. J. in delivering the opinion of the Court, in Lessee of Fetch vs. Good, (2 Binn. 495,): “The cause turned upon matters of fact, and it was submitted to the Jury, resting very much upon the credibility of one of the plaintiff’s
I am not insensible to the force of the very able and ingenious argument, which has been submitted by the counsel of the defendants in error. But after all, the question recurs, will this Court undertake to say, that there was no fraud in the sale of this negro, when the Jury, upon sufficient evidence, have found that there was ? And,to justify the Court in setting aside the verdict, it is not sufficient that it should doubt or entertain scruples about the result of the finding. It must clearly see, and be satisfied that it was wrong. Were I in the Jury-box, I am not prepared to say that I should have found differently upon the evidence, in this bill of exceptions.
Keeping in view, then, the proper preservation and protection
In our judgment, therefore, the motion for a new trial ought not to have been granted.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- James Stroud, in error v. Henry S. Mays and Beersheba Stroud, in error
- Cited By
- 2 cases
- Status
- Published