McDowell v. Oyer

21 Pa. 417, 1853 Pa. LEXIS 147
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 25, 1853
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 21 Pa. 417 (McDowell v. Oyer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McDowell v. Oyer, 21 Pa. 417, 1853 Pa. LEXIS 147 (Pa. 1853).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered, by

Black, C. J.

— This was assumpsit. The plaintiff proved (or produced evidence tending to prove) that there was a contract between him and the defendant’s intestate, by which he (the plaintiff) was to serve Myers as his agent and the manager of his business, until his (Myers’) death; that for this service Myers was to give him a certain piece of land; that the service was rendered accordingly, but Myers died without conveying the land, and without making any provision for carrying his part of the contract into effect. The plaintiff also had a book account for blacksmith’s work.

The declaration contained the common counts, and a special count averring the contract above mentioned, performance by the plaintiff, and a breach by the other party.

The three errors assigned are, (1), that the book account was improperly admitted in evidence; (2), that in the charge the jury were told that the contract was faintly denied; and (3), that they were erroneously instructed to regard the value of the land as the measure of damages. ... v'\ , -

.-1. All the counts in this declaration are in assumpsit. , The cause of action on the contract could not have been set out in any other form. It is entirely too late in the day to deny that the common counts for work and labor may be joined with a special count. The plea of not guilty to a declaration in assumpsit is barbarous, and if the plaintiff had demurred, the judgment must have been for him. The best we can do for the defendant is to suppose that he has pleaded a proper plea. Assuming thus much in his favor, the admission of the book account wras perfectly right.

IL Nine witnesses testify to the- declarations of Myers, that Oyer had given up his intention of moving to the west, to stay with him, and attend to his business, in consideration of his promise to give him a piece of land. He did not state the bargain with equal distinctness to all the witnesses, and in some of the [422]*422conversations he seems to have referred to one tract, and in others to a different one. The judge said that the defendant denied faintly the fact of there being such a contract, and contended that if there was any contract at all, it related to the least valuable of the tracts; and on this subject the evidence being contradictory, it was submitted to the jury to say.what land was designated in the contract.

I cannot see how we are expected to treat this as an error fatal to the judgment. If this remark of the Court were demonstrated to be a mistake — if it were proved to our entire satisfaction that the contract was denied not faintly, but loudly — we could not reverse on that account; for it concerns no matter of law, and our jurisdiction does not extend to the correction of any but legal errors. Besides, when there are no written points submitted, the statement by the Court' óf the counsel’s line of argument must be conclusively taken as true, that being the only evidence on the subject which the record affords. In addition to this, we'think there was no just ground on which an absolute and total denial of the contract could be safely rested. That there was some contract: like the one alleged was very clearly proved. If, therefore, the Court had said that it was not denied at all, it would be but justice to the candor of the defendant and his counsel to believe the statement.

III. _ The main question in the cause is, whether the right rule was adopted for assessing the damages. The Court charged that the measure of compensation for the plaintiff’s service was the value of the land which the other party had promised to give for it.

This case is in every word and circumstance precisely like Jack v. McKee (9 Barr 235), in which this Court unanimously decided that one who gives his personal services on a contract to be paid in land, is entitled, if he does not get the land, to get its value. The same thing was held in Bash v. Bash (9 Barr 260). It had been previously established as the law of New York, in Burlingame v. Burlingame (7 Cow. 92), and a point nearly akin to it was settled here in Rohr v. Kindt (3 W. & Ser. 568). These decisions did but embody and stamp with the impress of judicial authority the almost universal opinion of the legal profession, and the innate sense of right which pervaded the popular mind. Although such cases must have arisen very often, the two taken up in 1848 from Westmoreland, were the first that reached this Court. To my certain knowledge, the same rule had many times before that been acted on and sustained by the Courts of Common Pleas, and no question made, of its correctness, though it stood in the way of being challenged by some of the ablest lawyers in the western part, of the state.

[423]*423The judgment we are about to give might well be rested on the mere authority of the cases I have cited. When a point has been solemnly ruled by the tribunal of .the last resort, after full argument and with the assent of all the judges, we have the highest evidence which can be produced in favor of the unwritten-law. •

It is sometimes said that this adherence to precedent is slavish; that it fetters the mind of the judge, and compels him to decide without reference to principle. But let it be remembered that stare decisis is itself a principle of great magnitude and importance. It is absolutely necessary to the formation and permanence of any system of jurisprudence. Without it we may fairly be said to have no law; for law is a fixed and established rule, not depending in the slightest degree on the caprice of those who may happen to administer it. I take it that the adjudications of this Court, when they are free from absurdity, not mischievous in practice, and consistent with one another, are the law of the land. It is this law which we are bound to execute, and not any “higher law,” manufactured for each special occasion out of our own private feelings and opinions. If it be wrong, the government has a department whose duty it is to amend it, and the responsibility is not in any wise thrown upon the judiciary. The inferior tribunals follow our decisions, and the people conform to them because they-take it for granted that what we have said once we will say again. There being no superior power to define the law for us as we define it for others, we ought to be a law unto ourselves. If we are not, we are without a standard altogether. The uncertainty of the law— an uncertainty inseparable from the nature of the science — is a great evil at best, and we would aggravate it terribly if we could be blown about by every wind of doctrine, holding for true to-day what we repudiate as false to-morrow.

,Of course I am not saying that we must consecrate the mere blunders of those who wenfc-before us, and stumble every time we come to the place where they have stumbled. A palpable mistake, violating justice, reason, and law, must be corrected, no matter by whom it may have been made. There are cases in our books which bear such marks of haste and inattention, that they demand reconsideration. There are some which must be disregarded, because they cannot be reconciled with others. There are old decisions of which the authority has become obsolete, by a total alteration in the circumstances of the country and the progress of opinion. Témpora mutantur. We change with the change of the times, as necessarily as we move with the motion of the earth.

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Bluebook (online)
21 Pa. 417, 1853 Pa. LEXIS 147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdowell-v-oyer-pa-1853.