Hill v. Hill
Hill v. Hill
Opinion of the Court
There have been two questions made in this cause»
I consider this matter as amendable; if the venire is right the secondary process may be made so. 1 Baa. Ab. 146,157.
In Welsh v. Upton
In 3 Bulstrod 186. Doddridge says, if there is no distringas returned it is aided by 30 H. 8. c. 30.
In French v. Wiltshire
%nd It is objected the Judge told the jury that as defendant’s testator had used the plaintiff’s property and had not accounted therefor, the rise in the value subsequent to the delivery should accrue to the plaintiff.
This is not altogether supported by the report of the Judge. The purport of his direction to the jury was, that if the certificates were received by the testator from the plaintiff, and never returned or offered to be accounted for, it was proper to estimate their value, and if the jury should be of opinion that the plaintiff was entitled to. the value of funded certificates, as he had been deprived of the benefit of them by the defendant’s retaining and converting them to his own use they were at liberty so to find.
If it was. meant that the plaintiff was entitled to any rise in the value of the certificates occurring subsequently to the delivery, then the objection is to be considered.
The declaration states that on the %d of March 1788, in consideration of the delivery by the,plaintiff of three certificates' to the testator at his request, he the testator undertook
What the testator therefore undertakes to pay, according to this state of the case, is, the value of the certificates. He never promised to redeliver those certificates, and all that he was compellable to pay was their actual value; and when that value is to be estimated, and what is the effect of this agreement are the questions now to be considered.
It appears to me clearly that the first count in the declaration states an absolute sale. Many cases might be cited to prove this; one however will be sufficient — it is the case of Herbert v. Bostow.
If I am right in considering this as a sale, this consequence follows, that the purchaser has a right to the rise in the value of the certificates, and if they deteriorate he must suffer the loss. Thé plaintiff in the present case can have no right to recover more from the defendant than the value of the certi ■ ficates at the time of the sale,- — and as the jury have given more they have done wrong.
New trial awarded.
Cro. El. 259.
Andrews 67.
Ibid 248,
1 Salk. 25. 2 Ld. Ray. 895.
Note-See Lansing v. Turner 2 Johns. 13.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Hill against Hill
- Status
- Published