Carman v. Smick
Carman v. Smick
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court, was delivered by the Chief Justice,
This was an action brought by Smiek against Carman, before a Justice. Judgment was given for the plaintiff, and on an appeal to the Common Pleas, that judgment was affirmed. Carman, the defendant below, now seeks a reversal of those judgments, upon certiorari to this court. Several errors are assigned : 1st, That the state of demand is uncertain, contradictory, and contains no legal cause of action; and this objection, I think is well taken. The state of demand alleges, that the plaintiff bought of the defendant, and that the defendant then and there sold and delivered to him, a pair of oxen at a certain price per hundred weight, to be taken away, killed and weighed by the plaintiff, and paid for when weighed; and then, the plaintiff avers, that afterwards, on, &c. he went for and demanded the oxen, but that the defendant refused to let the plaintiff have or take them away, whereby the plaintiff lost great gains which would have accrued to him, on a sale thereof, &c. to his damage, &c. Now if the former part of the declaration is true, to wit: that the defendant had sold and delivered to him the oxen, then the property had changed, and become vested in the plaintiff. If afterwards, the defendant got possession of them, and refused to deliver them up on demand, the plaintiff’s remedy was by action of detinue, or for trover and conversion, or perhaps by replevin. Instead however of either of these appropriate remedies, he has brought assumpsit, as upon an original contract, to deliver, not only without averring any promise to deliver, but against his own positive averment, that defendant had already delivered the oxen to him. It seems to me, on the face of the declaration, to be an action for not performing or executing, an already executed contract. But 2d, It is objected by the plaintiff in certiorari, that waiving all exceptions to the form of the action, the contract being for the sale of goods for upwards of thirty dollars, and no delivery or earnest money paid, nor any note or memorandum thereof made in writing, was within the statute of frauds, Rev. Laws, 148 sect. 15, and therefore void. These facts appearing by the state of the case, the question is fairly before this court: whether, admitting the contract to have been, as the defendant insisted it was, that the oxen were to be delivered upon request, to be
Several other points have been raised by the plaintiff’s counsel, which are not necessary to be considered; I will only remark in reference to the refusal of the Court of Common Pleas, to entertain a motion for a non-suit, on the ground that the defendant had “ rested;” that his having done so, was no reason
Ford, J. and Ryerson, J. concurred.
Judgment reversed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- ELIJAH CARMAN v. PETER SMICK
- Status
- Published