Barnard v. Yates

10 S.C.L. 142
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJanuary 15, 1818
StatusPublished

This text of 10 S.C.L. 142 (Barnard v. Yates) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barnard v. Yates, 10 S.C.L. 142 (S.C. 1818).

Opinions

The opinion of the Oourt was delivered by

Gantt, J.

The grounds taken are substantially the same, and need not be separately commented upon. I will premise, that whatever differences of opinion may formerly have existed, as to the rule which ought to govern in cases of this description, there remains, at present, no doubt [87]*87upon the subject. Our decisions, for a series of years, have been, and I trust, for the honor and advantage of the State, will ever continue to be governed by the civil law maxim, “that a sound price requires a sound commodity.” It cannot be doubted, but that attempts have too often been made to introduce, as coming within the purview and meaning of this maxim, cases founded on mere inadequacy of consideration, in contracts where all imaginable fairness has been observed, and where the purchaser, with a full and perfect knowledge of the true nature and quality of the thing sold, has nevertheless agreed to give more than it was worth. And from a mistaken apprehension of the true nature of the maxim, others have endeavored to evade the payment of their debts, * where the thing purchased turns out not to answer those speculating views, which led th,em to contract for it. From considerations of this kind, complaints have been uttered against the adoption of the civil law maxim, as a proper and correct rule of decision. It has been thought to have opened a door for endless litigation, and that no person is safe, who enters into a contract, however correct in the transaction, if it should eventually appear, that the contracting parties had not placed themselves upon a perfect footing of equality in point of value. But the perversion and abuse of a rule, is no argument against its intrinsic excellence and worth. To the sound discretion of a court and jury it belongs, to draw the proper discrimination between the cases which do, and such as do not, come within its meaning and efficacy. And, if in any instance, the rule has been rendered subservient to the purposes of chichanery and dishonesty on the part of purchasers, it must be attributed to extrinsic circumstances, not within the control of any human tribunal.

Perhaps it may be proper here to remark, that a great deal of the complexity which arises in actions bottomed upon the adopted principle of the civil law, and defences made under it, emanates from the unceasing endeavors made by ingenious and able counsel, to apply indiscriminately those rules of decision observed in the Enlish courts, which have been exploded here; rules, which have been thought, unjust in themselves, and demoralizing in their effects upon society. Those rules have been relied upon in the present case. It has been argued, that the defence set up in this action, is analogous to the action on the case, in nature of deceit, in England. But can it for a moment be seriously contended, after the repeated trials which we have had in our courts on the subject of implied warranty, under the adopted maxim here, that we are bound by those strict and rigid rules which govern in the action alluded to in England ? There, if an article is sold as sound, which the seller *knew to be otherwise, the plaintiff, in an action brought for the imposition, must aver in his declaration, the knowledge of the seller, or as it is technically expressed, the scienter. The case of the Bezoar stone, Chandelor vs. Lopus, 1 Cro. Jac. 4, quoted by the plaintiff’s counsel, may be taken as an example, that such is the law there. The goldsmith, in that case, was skilled in articles of that description. He had imposed on the plaintiff one, which he affirmed at the time of the sale to be a Bezoar stone; it was purchased as such, from a confidence reposed in the integrity and truth of the seller, whereas it was not so. [88]*88The plaintiff failed to recover, because be bad not averred in bis declaration that the goldsmith knew it not to be a Bezoar stone, or that he warranted it to be such; and this essential part of the declaration must be strictly proved on the trial. The mind of every honest, upright man, revolts at such a doctrine; and I think I may confidently assert, that such is not the law here. In England, a buyer must, indeed, for his own security, be upon the alert, and wonderfully dextrous and circumspect in detecting the thousand little tricks and villainies, which the crafty and designing are capable of practising on the unsuspecting and unwary, else he can meet with no redress. To such a state of things, they may well have for their maxim, “ caveat emptor.” On oar part we have exchanged it for that of caveat venditor, 'and in behalf of honesty and fair dealing, I would say, esto perpetua.

I think it has been truly observed, that it is a disgrace to the law, that such a maxim, as that of “caveat emptor,” should ever have been adopted. Judge Cooper, in his notes on Justinian, page 610, has expressed his joy, that the good sense of the Carolina Bench had rejected it. Whilst, therefore, on the one hand, a sense of deserved commendation, and the propriety of a strict adherence to an adopted rule of decision, should govern our future determinations, we must, on the other, be careful to guard against those practices of fraud and circumvention, which dishonest purwill sometimes have recourse to, in order that they may get rid of bargains which have been fairly entered into, and where there has been no imposition practised. I think it may be laid down, however, as a sound and correct position, that in no case ought a contract to be enforced, where the contracting parties have entered into it under a misapprehension and ignorance of such defects as would have prevented the contract, had the defects been known at the time. In such cases, the rule, that a sound price requires a sound commodity, applies with full force and propriety. A rule that can have no application or bearing, where the buyer is correctly informed of the true nature and quality of the thing purchased, whatever may be its defects, or whatever the price agreed to be paid for it. To such cases, we must apply the maxim, that “volenti non fit injuria.”

The case of Whitfield McLeod, 2 Bay, 380, has been relied on, as in point, to decide the present. The Judge below, it seems, approving the argument of the Attorney General, in the former case, and recognizing a resemblance in it to this case, adopted it as a part of his charge. It is always with great deference and respect for the opinions of my brother Nott, that I undertake to differ from him; but I must frankly confess, that I have not been able to trace a similitude. What were the facts in that case ? The purchaser critically examined the true state and condition of the ship. He called to his assistance discernment and skill. The seller made just and true representations of all the defects, and asked no more than what such a vessel in such a state was really worth. There was, therefore, no inadequacy of consideration. It was a speculation on the part of the buyer, to which he was prompted by the high price of freight. After the purchase, the price of freight fell The purchaser’s views of gain could not be realized to the extent he had contemplated. The vessel being somewhat heavy on his hands, and as the times had changed, he was willing to change with them, and endeavored to shift a bur[89]*89den* from his own, upon the shoulders of an innocent and fair seller. Contrast the prominent circumstances of the two cases, and there will be found no analogy between them. In that, there was no defect, but what the purchaser was made acquainted with.

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10 S.C.L. 142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barnard-v-yates-sc-1818.