Greenwood v. Curtis

6 Mass. 358
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1810
StatusPublished
Cited by57 cases

This text of 6 Mass. 358 (Greenwood v. Curtis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Greenwood v. Curtis, 6 Mass. 358 (Mass. 1810).

Opinion

Parsons, C. J.

This action is assumpsit on a promissory [298]*298note for the delivery of slaves, and the payment ol [ * 363 ] * bars, which are an African currency, and also on an insimul computassent. A verdict has been found for the plaintiff, upon a trial on the general issue, subject to the opinion of the Court, upon a case stated by the parties.

[299]*299Two objections have been made to the verdict by the counsel for the defendant — that the letters of Hippias * were improperly admitted in evidence; and, if they [ * 3S4 ] were not, that no action can be maintained in this state on a breach of either of the supposed promises.

[300]*300The note was made at Rio Pongos, on the coast of Africa, for the delivery of slaves there on demand. Hence the defend- [ * 365 ] ant very properly argued that the slaves ought to * have been demanded, before he could be discharged in an action on the note; and there was no evidence of this demand, but [301]*301what arose out of Hippias’s letters. If those were not properly admitted, and the plaintiff cannot recover upon the insimul computas sent, the verdict must be set aside. But if the plaintiff can maintain his action upon * the insimul computassent, [ * 366 ] where no previous demand was necessary to entitle him [302]*302to his action, the admission of Hippias’s letters becomes immaterial, and cannot affect the verdict.

When the plaintiff’s vessel, of which Hick )orn was master and supercargo, arrived in Africa, the master sold [ * 367 ] * the cargo to the defendant, to be paid for by the de[303]*303livery of one hundred and fifteen slaves. The defendant delivered but a part of the slaves to Delaney, who, on the death of Hichborn, succeeded him as master, and the vessel returned without the residue. The contract on the part of the defendant was then broken, and the plaintiff, if the * contract [ * 368 ] [304]*304was lawful, had his remedy at law, to recover damages for such breach.

That the contract was not performed, is admitted by the defendant; for he has stated an account between himself and the owner of the outward cargo, in which he credits the owner with [305]*305the value of the cargo, and after having * charged him [ * 369 ] with the slaves delivered, and the advances made to the master, acknowledges a balance in cash of 6056 bars, equal to 4481 dollars 41 cents, due from him. If no further transactions had been had. there can be no doubt but that the plaintiff, on assenting to [306]*306this settlement, might have recovered this balance on an [ * 370 ] insimul computassent, *and without making a demand of the money previous to the action.

But it appears that, on the same day, before Delaney left Rio Pongos, the defendant also made the note declared on, the balance [307]*307of the account being the consideration of the note, and the note and accounts being parts of the * same transac- [ * 371 ] tion. It is manifest, then, that the plaintiff cannot recover both on the note and on the account. If there be no illegality attached to this transaction, the plaintiff may recover on either, as the note, not being negotiable nor accepted in satisfaction of the account, nor of a higher nature, does not merge the account.

* Being, therefore, well satisfied that an action may be [ * 372 ] maintained on the insimul computassent, if the settlement

was not illegal, without any previous demand, it becomes unnecessary to give any opinion on the admission of Hippias’s letters. But having considered this question, it is our opinion that the admission was regular. Hippias was * sent to make the [*373] demand, in a country where there is no regular civil government, and not having, that we know of, any magistrates or notaries authorized to take and certify affidavits, or regularly to authenticate testimony in any manner; and as no cause was then pending or expected, it cannot be required that he should carry with him a dedimus protestatem.

* There seems therefore to be a commercial necessity [ * 374 ] to admit evidence of this nature under these circumstances, to enforce contracts made abroad in barbarous or uncivilized countries.

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Bluebook (online)
6 Mass. 358, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greenwood-v-curtis-mass-1810.