Dorman v. Elder

3 Blackf. 490, 1834 Ind. LEXIS 67
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 12, 1834
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Blackf. 490 (Dorman v. Elder) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dorman v. Elder, 3 Blackf. 490, 1834 Ind. LEXIS 67 (Ind. 1834).

Opinions

Stevens, J.

Elder, the defendant in error, declared against Dorman, the plaintiff in error, in the Scott Circuit Court, on a covenant under seal in these words and figures, to wit, — “By the 1st day of November next, I will pay Samuel Elder 90 dollars and 43 cents, in merchantable hogs, for value received of him, as witness my hand and seal. December 8th, 1828. — Henry Dorman, [L. S.]” Dorman pleaded in bar three several special pleas, all of which were demurred to, the demurrers sustained, and final judgment rendered in favour of Elder, the plaintiff below, that he recover of Dorman 101 dollars damages, together with his costs, &c.

The question before this Court is, Whether these pleas, or any one of them, contain a legal bar to the plaintiff’s action? The second plea is clearly defective; the demurrer to it was therefore correctly sustained, and no further notice need be taken of it. The third plea is, that he the said Dorman on the said 1st day of November, 1829, the day on which said hogs were to be delivered, was ready and willing throughout the whole course of the said day, until the uttermost convenient hour thereof, at his, said Dorman's residence in the said county, to have discharged his said covenant in hogs, agreeably to the tenor and effect of his said covenant, and did then and there set apart “a number of hogs” of the description named in the covenant, sufficient to have discharged the same, but that- said Ek/er. failed to attend and receive them.

It is contended by Dorman, that this plea contains a sufficiency, if true, to bar the plaintiff’s action; arid he relies solely on the opinion of this Court in the case of Johnson v. Baird. In that case, among other things it is said, that “the plea of readiness to perform is dictated and sustained by common sense, the common and daily transactions of men, and by the principles of natural justice; and is allowed for the mutual benefit of both parties, and not solely for the benefit of the defendant.” And, again,' it is further said in the same opinion, that “in all cases where the debtor wishes to discharge himself, not only from the contract, but also from all future liability for the [492]*492articles set apart, he must set them off by count, measure, weight, or value, agreeably to his contract,” so that the creditor can distinguish and know them; and when so set apart, they must be there left and abandoned for the creditor, to enable him to take possession of them when he pleases, or maintain an action of trover and conversion for them against any person who may interfere with them.

If, then, the plea under consideration is intended to operate as a bar, not only of the contract, but also a bar to any future liability for the articles set off to the creditor, it is clearly insufficient. It lacks two most material averments. The number of the hogs set off to the creditor is not shown. This is material, to enable the creditor to inquire after them, take possession of them, or bring suit for them, if found in the possession of others. Again, it'is not stated that the hogs set off to the creditor, were there abandoned by the debtor and left as the property of the creditor; it may be, for aught that appears upon the face of the plea, that the debtor kept the hogs himself, and never left them at the place where he avers, he set them off, a .single moment, but instantly converted them to his own use.

If, however, it should be said that this plea is not intended as .a bar to all future liability for the hogs set off to the creditor, but only a bar to the covenant, it will be found equally defective. In the case of Johnson v. Baird, above noticed, this Court says that where the debtor does not abandon the articles set off to the creditor, but elects to keep possession of them himself, he undertakes at his own peril and risk to keep them safely for the creditor, and to deliver them to him whenever he demands them at the proper place; and that it must be averred in the plea that the debtor was ready at the time, place, &c. with the articles, and that the creditor was not there to receive them, as is averred .in this plea, and also that he has ever since been so ready, and is still so ready, to deliver said articles whenever the creditor should attend to receive them. These latter averments are not in this plea, and therefore it is in that particular also materially defective, and the demurrer to it was well taken.

The first plea is of a different character; it presents not only an important but a vexed question. It avers that between the day of making the covenant under seal and the day appointed for the delivering of the hogs, it was agreed by find between him the said Dorman and the said Elder, that he the said Elder [493]*493would receive cattle in lieu of the said hogs in discharge of the covenant, if said cattle were delivered at any time in the course of the summer of 1830, and that he Dorman was ready and willing at his residence in the said county of Scott, throughout the whole course of the summer of 1830, to have delivered said cattle, and did then and there designate and set apart the same for the said Elder, but that'he never attended to receive them, and that he the said Dorman has ever since had said cattle at his said residence, and still there has them ready to deliver to the said Elder, but that he has never as yet attended to receive them.

The first'objection raised to this plea is, that it is not shown by the plea where the cattle, which were to be received in lieu of the hogs, should be delivered, and that consequently it is not shown that they were tendered and kept ready for delivery at the place stipulated for the delivery. It is true, that no place is named in the plea as the stipulated place of delivery, but it does not follow as a consequence, that it is not shown that the cattle were tendered and kept ready to deliver at the proper place. No place of delivery is named in the sealed covenant, on which the suit is brought, for the delivery of the hogs, nor is any place of delivery averred in the declaration, except the county of Scott; and as the cattle named in the plea were substituted for the hogs, without any designation of a place of delivery, it is necessarily implied that they were to be delivered at the.same place that the hogs were to have been delivered. The question then is, Where were the hogs to have been delivered? The declaration avers that the sealed covenant was made in the county of Scott, and that the hogs were to have been delivered in the county of Scott; and this plea in reference to the declaration and in reference to the whole record preceding it, avers that the residence of Dorman, the obligor in the sealed covenant, was in “said county,” that is, the said county of Scott, the place where the sealed covenant was made, and the place where the declaration avers that the hogs were to be delivered. Under that state of facts, the hogs would have been properly delivered at the residence of the obligor; and therefore the plea as to that is sufficient.

The next and principal objection to this plea is, that it is an attempt to dissolve or rescind a covenant under seal by a parol contract. This objection is one of much weight, and should [494]*494not be lightly, passed over.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Blackf. 490, 1834 Ind. LEXIS 67, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dorman-v-elder-ind-1834.