Johnson v. M'Lane

7 Blackf. 501, 1845 Ind. LEXIS 96
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 26, 1845
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 7 Blackf. 501 (Johnson v. M'Lane) 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
Johnson v. M'Lane, 7 Blackf. 501, 1845 Ind. LEXIS 96 (Ind. 1845).

Opinion

Dewey, J.

— Trial of the right of property taken on execution, on the claim of Johnson against M‘Lane the execution-creditor. Cause appealed to the Circuit Court. Verdict and judgment for the defendant.

The facts are as follows: M‘Lane recovered a judgment against one Swope in the Decatur Circuit Court, and, on the 13th of June, 1842, caused an execution to be issued thereon, which, on the same day, was delivered to the sheriff, who made no indorsement of the time of delivery upon it; on the 29th of August of the same year, the sheriff levied the execution on a mare, a bay horse, and a sorrel horse, as the property of Swope — the mare being found in the possession of Johnson. About the first of June aforesaid, the mare was owned by Johnson, and the bay horse by Swope; Johnson and Swope, then, made an exchange of the mare for the bay horse, and delivered possession of the animals accordingly. It was stipulated in the contract, that Johnson should have the privilege of returning the horse within three or four days, if, on trial, it was found he would not work well. A defect in one of the eyes of the horse was pointed out, and Swope declared that he was in other respects sound. There was evidence tending to show that the horse was a ridgling; that Swope knew the fact and did not disclose it to Johnson. After the expiration of the time limited for the return of the horse, Johnson declared that he worked well, and that it was his intention to keep him. There was other evidence tending to show that the horse worked well, but that he was [503]*503troublesome when harnessed with a mare, was vicious to other horses, and had to be kept by himself. About months after the contract, and before the levy of the execution, Johnson demanded of Swope that he should take back the horse and rescind the contract, alleging as the cause of the demand the before stated situation of the horse; at this time the horse was worked to a low condition of flesh. The parties made a new contract by which Johnson received back the mare, and Swope the horse, and he received also with him fifteen hundred pounds of hay. Subsequently to this transaction, but before the levy, Swope exchanged this horse for a sorrel horse, with a third person. The sheriff seized all three of the animals, as before stated, on the execution as the property of Swope; and Johnson filed his claim for the mare, which is the property in dispute. Johnson and Swope were residents of the same village.

The Court charged the jury: 1. That by the failure of Johnson to return the bay horse within the period stipulated by the contract, the mare became the absolute property of Swope, was bound by the lien arising from the delivery of the execution to the sheriff, though the time of delivery was not indorsed on the writ, and was rightfully held by the levy. 2. That if in the first contract of exchange, Swope made a false warranty of the horse, or misrepresented his qualities, neither of those circumstances would affect the right of the execution-creditor to hold the mare on the execution. And the Court refused to instruct the jury: 1. That if Swope, at the time -of the first contract, made false and fraudulent representations in regard to the soundness and qualities of the horse, no property in the mare vested in him; and that if Johnson got her back before the levy, she was not subject to the execution. 2. That the seizure of the bay horse on the execution was a relinquishment of the lien on the mare.

Three questions are presented by the facts of this cause, the solution of which will test the correctness of the decisions of the Court in reference to the instructions: Was the mare the property of Swope, the execution-debtor, at the time the writ was delivered to the sheriff? Was the delivery of the writ a lien upon that property? And if so, did the seizure of the bay horse on the execution discharge the lien?

[504]*504As to the first question: If the contract of exchange between Johnson and Swope be viewed independently of a warranty which was broken, and of any question of fraud, there can be no doubt that the ownership of the mare was vested unconditionally in Swope, and of the horse in Johnson, by the failure of the latter to return the horse within the stipulated period. By such failure the contract became absolute, and effected a complete change of property in the two animals. The right of Johnson, under the contract, to return the horse ceased on the third or fourth day of June. Swope, of course, was the owner of the mare on the 13th of that month, the day on which the execution was delivered to the sheriff. But even if there was a bona fide but broken warranty in respect of the horse by Swope, that alone could not change the result. It did not annul the contract of exchange, and divest Swope of the ownership of the mare; she still remained his,..as the horse belonged to Johnson. Weston v. Downes, 1 Dougl. 23.—Power v. Wells, Cowp. 818.—Payne v. Whale, 7 East, 274.—Emanuel v. Dane, 3 Campb. 299.—Street v. Blay, 2 B. & Adol. 456.—Gompertz v. Denton, 1 C. & M. 207. If the- contract be viewed as fraudulent on the part of Swope, in consequence of wilfully false representations made by him, a question of more difficulty presents itself. There are many cases, certainly, in which it has been held, that a vendee acquired no property in goods obtained under pretence of a purchase brought about by his own fraud. But we know of no decision in which the vendor has been viewed as not having parted with the ownership of goods, while he willingly held in his own hands a valuable consideration received for them. On the contrary, we conceive the law to be that such a vendor is not at liberty to treat the sale as a nullity on account' of the fraud of the vendee. Burton v. Stewart, 3 Wend. 236. The exchange of horses between Johnson and Swope was made about the 1st of June. If Johnson had the right to return the horse and rescind the contract, in consequence of the fraud of Swope, (with regard to which we give no opinion,) he was bound to do it within a reasonable time. Chitt. von Cont. 573. But he kept the horse and worked him nearly two months without complaint, and without any attempt' to return him, though he.had daily [505]*505opportunities of doing so had he desired it. It is not shown in excuse of this delay, that he did not sooner discover the objection to the horse; and from the nature of the objection, it is probable he must have known it in a very short time. We think, therefore, if the right to rescind the contract ever existed it was forfeited by delay. The mare was the property of Swope on the 13th of June, when the sheriff received the execution on which she was taken. It is true that, prior to the levy, Johnson had become the owner of her by his second contract with Swope; but he took her subject to the lien of the execution if a lien existed. M‘Call v. Trevor et al. 4 Blackf. 496.

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Bluebook (online)
7 Blackf. 501, 1845 Ind. LEXIS 96, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-mlane-ind-1845.