Hurst v. Purvis

Indiana Supreme Court
Hurst v. Purvis, 5 Blackf. 557 (Ind. 1841)
1841 Ind. LEXIS 40

Hurst v. Purvis

Opinion of the Court

COVENANT. The facts alleged in the declaration were substantially as follows: The parties entered into a sealed agreement on the 12th of September, 1838; according to which, the plaintiff sold certain cattle to the defendants, to be delivered to them at the plaintiff’s farm in Wayne county on or before the first of December then following; for which cattle the defendants were to pay the plaintiff a certain price at the time of delivery. The plaintiff had the cattle at the time and place ready to be delivered, and actually set them apart for the defendants; but the defendants did not attend to receive them. The plaintiff continued to keep the cattle, so set apart, ready at the place for the defendants until the 8th of the same December, when the defendants, having the day before paid a part of the price, came and accepted the cattle from the plaintiff as a compliance with his part of the contract, and converted them to their own use. The defendants have not paid, &c.

Pleas, 1. The cattle were not delivered on or before the first of December, 1838. 2. The defendants did not accept the cattle on or before the first of December, 1838. 3. Accord and satisfaction, by the delivery and acceptance of a promissory note executed by the defendants and others, in satisfaction, &c. Replication to the third plea, consisting of various matters of evidence tending to show that the plea was not true, and concluding as follows, “and so the note was not accepted in satisfaction,” &c.

Held, that the replication to the third plea was bad on special demurrer, being argumentative, &c. Held, also, that the first and second pleas were bad, and the declaration good, on general demurrer.

Reference

Full Case Name
Hurst v. Purvis and Another.—In error
Status
Published