Finley v. Quirk

9 Minn. 194
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJuly 15, 1864
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 9 Minn. 194 (Finley v. Quirk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Finley v. Quirk, 9 Minn. 194 (Mich. 1864).

Opinion

By the Court

Wilson, J.

Action for breach of warranty of a horse.

The suit was originally commenced in justice’s court, and after judgment removed by appeal into the District Court of Rice County.

In the complaint the Plaintiff “ charged that the Defendant in sale of a horse to him warranted the horse to be sound, perfect in every respect, and true, gentle, and willing to work — all which representations he knew to be false.”

Defendant in his answer “ denied the warranty and all knowledge of any defects, and alleged that at the time of sale the horse was sound, gentle, and willing to work.”

[198]*198Verdict was rendered in the district court for the Plaintiff, and the Defendant thereupon moved the court for a new trial.

The motion was denied, and the Defendant appealed to this court.

The grounds for a new trial urged in this court are — (1) Error in law occurring at the trial and excepted to; (2) That the evidence was not sufficient to justify the verdict.

These objections we will examine in the inverse order of their statement.

It appeared from the evidence given on part of the Plaintiff in the Court below, that upon a trial of the horse three or four days after the purchase he proved to be “balky.”

Defendant’s counsel insist that this is not evidence that he was “balky” at the time of sale. This objection is untenable. The “ trial” was not at a time so remote as to justify the belief that a change had taken place in the disposition of the horse between the time of purchase and the time of trial.

The following are the alleged errors of law occurring at the trial and excepted to.

1. “Upon appeal to the District Court the Plaintiff moved that the surety on Defendant’s appeal bond be required to justify or that he be reqired to furnish another surety.” The court ruled that if the Plaintiff would make affidavit that the surety was insufficient he would require him to justify or the Defendant must procure another. To this ruling the Defendant excepted, and furnished another surety, the surety on the bond not being in attendance.

The “ case,” from which we have above quoted, does not show any ground for this “exception.” It does not show that any order, or, in fact, that any operative ruling was made by the court in the premises, and therefore it is unneessary for us to inquire whether the ruling of the court below on this point was correct.

2. On the trial “ the Defendant offered to prove that since the commencement of this suit the Plaintiff has been offered one' hundred dollars for the horse by a good and responsible party and refused it. Objected to by Plaintiff. Objection sustained and exception taken by Defendant.”

[199]*199This evidence was offered for the purpose of showing the value of the horse. What a “ good and responsible party” offered, is not evidence of that fact. But even if this evidence was erroneously excluded, the error was corrected by the subsequent admission of evidence of the same fact by other witnesses.

Two witnesses were afterward called by the Defendant, and testified to the same point, without objection by Plaintiff.

3. In the examination of the Plaintiff’s witnesses it appeared that on Saturday the parties met, and the Plaintiff agreed to purchase and the Defendant to sell the horse at a price agreed upon. The Plaintiff then paid $5 to “ bind the bargain,” agreeing to pay the balance of the purchase money on the next day, when the horse was to be delivered. The horse was delivered, and the purchase money paid on the next day (the Sabbath), in pursuance of the contract

When the Plaintiff closed his evidence and rested his case the Defendant moved the court for judgment on the ground that the evidence showed that the bargain was consummated on Sunday. The motion was denied, and Defendant excepted. This is the principal point in the case. We think the only one relied upon by Defendant’s counsel.

The sale of a horse consummated on the Sabbath is void, and an action on the warranty in such sale will not lie. Comp. Sts., p. 730, sec. 19; Smith vs. Wilcox, 24 N. Y., 353; Northrop vs. Foot, 14 Wend., 248; Brimhall vs. Van Campen, 8 Minn., 13; Finney vs. Callender, Id., 41.

It is claimed by the counsel for the Plaintiff that this point was not in issue, and therefore that the evidence touching it was irrelevant.

It is doubtless true that evidence must correspond with the allegations, and be confined to the point in issue, and if in the examination of witnesses facts come out which had they been alleged would furnish ground of relief or defence, such facts must be disregarded unless they are warranted by the allegations of the pleadings. Stuart vs. Merch. and Farm. Bk., 19 John., 505; Field vs. Mayor of N.Y., 2 Seld., 179.

[200]*200The Defendant insists that the answer does not admit a valid contract.

We will for the present take this for granted, and examine the case in that point of view.

The case therefore turns on the question whether it was necessary to specifically aver in the answer the facts establishing this defence.

We think this must be answered in the affirmative, whether it is viewed as a question of principle or by the light of authority.

Our statute provides that “ the complaint must contain a statement of th & facts constituting the cause of action in ordinary and concise language,” &c.

That the answer must contain (1) a denial of each allegation of the complaint controverted, and (2) a statement of any new matter <constituting a defence,” &o. That “ an issue of fact arises upon a material allegation of the complaint controverted by the answer,” &c.

It will be observed that the Plaintiff can only allege facts, and that in the answer the Defendant must either deny the facts alleged in the complaint, or allege new matter by way of defence or avoidance. And when the answer consists merely of a denial, it is quite clear that the Plaintiff will only be required to prove, and the Defendant only permitted to controvert the facts alleged in the complaint. Allen vs. Patterson, 3 Seld., 478; Mulry vs. Mohawk Valley Ins. Co., 5 Gray, 544.

In the language of Mr. Justice Selden, in case of Benedict vs. Seymour, 6 How. Pr. R., 298, “ a general traverse under the Code authorized the introduction of no evidence on the part of the Defendant except s.uch as tends directly to disprove some fact alleged in the complaint.”

If the question of the legality of the sale can be raised by a denial of any allegation of the complaint, it must be by a denial of the sale, for the day or time of the sale is not a material or traversable fact. 1 Chitty's Pl., 613-14, 621; 1 Barb. Ch. Pr., 136; 2 Saunders, 219; Stephen on Pl., 244-45; Newman vs. Otto, 4 Sandf., 668.

[201]*201We have above seen that an issue of fact arises only upon a material allegation

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Bluebook (online)
9 Minn. 194, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/finley-v-quirk-minn-1864.