Myers v. Conway

62 Ind. 474
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 62 Ind. 474 (Myers v. Conway) 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
Myers v. Conway, 62 Ind. 474 (Ind. 1878).

Opinion

Biddle, J.

Complaint by the appellee, against the appellants, on a promissory note, and also on a common count for the sale and delivery of a horse.

The first paragraph of answer to the note is in the following words:

-“ That they admit the execution of the note sued upon, but say that they executed the same for and in consideration of the sale and delivery, by plaintiff to defendants, of a certain horse named ‘Gray Aleck,’ and upon no other consideration whatever; that the said horse was [475]*475then and there utterly worthless, for the reason that said horse then and there had corns and ulcers on his feet, and his feet were so tender and diseased that the disease extended to the shoulders and the fore legs, so that he was of no use or value whatever, which infirmity was not known to the defendants at the time of the purchase. Wherefore; defendants say the consideration of the said note has wholly failed, and they ask judgment for costs.”

.The second paragraph of answer to the note counts upon, a warranty in the following words:

“ This is to cei’tify, that I have this day sold to W. II-Myers, of Fort Wayne, and S. E. & R. I. Bay, of Huntington, Indiana, the gray gelding ‘ Gray Aleck,’ for the sum of thirty-five hundred dollars ($3,500); that he is sound, to-the best of my knowledge, except a small wind-pnff, and he has no record below 2:35, and is not bai’red from trotting oxx any track from any cause. William Conway.

“ Huntington, May 13th, 1875.”

Breaches of warranty, and fraudulent representation,, are alleged.

The third paragraph pleaded to the note is a counterclaim, and the foui’th a set-off.

The answer to the common count in the complaint averred, that it is founded on the same cause of action as that set forth in the first paragraph of complaint, and set up a. counter-claim against it.

Various motions were made to strike out parts of the-, answer, ruled upon by the court, and exceptions taken by the appellants, but none of them have .been made a part of' the record by a bill of exceptions.

A demurrer to each paragraph of answer, specifying as. cause that it did not state facts sufficient to constitute a defence, was ovei’ruled to each, except the first, to which it was sustained. To these rulings exceptions were reserved-A general, and also a special, reply was then filed to the answer.

[476]*476Upon these issues the cause was tried by a jury, and a verdict returned for the appellee.

A motion for a new trial was filed, with fifteen alleged causes, several of which go to the pleadings and rulings upon motions preceding the trial, which are not valid causes for a new trial.

, The appellants filed numerous affidavits in support of the motion for a new trial, which were answered by numerous counter affidavits filed by the appellee.

The motion was overruled, exceptions reserved, and'judgment rendered on the verdict. Appeal.

We will examine such of the questions as are presented by the assignments of error and discussed by the appellants in their brief.

The first and second assignments of error, questioning the rulings of the court in striking out parts of the answer, are discussed at length by the appellants; but, as we incidentally remarked in stating the case, these questions .are not presented by a bill of exceptions, and are therefore not in the record.

The third assignment of error is, sustaining the demurrer to the first paragraph of answer. There is no error in this ruling. The answer is wholly insufficient. It amounts to no more than saying that the appellants bought a diseased horse without knowing that he was diseased, and .gave too much for him. It does not show any faults whatever on the part of the appellee in making the sale. The .appellants cite numerous authorities to convince us that a failure of consideration is a good answer to a note. Cerfainly it is, and we shall not decide any thing to the contrary ; but the facts averred do not show a failure of consideration. The vendee has got the very thing he bought, without any alleged fault of the vendor. This does not .amount to a want of consideration nor to a failure of consideration, although the article purchased may be. wholly valueless.

[477]*477The appellants, however, strongly insist that the first paragraph of their answer is good, and cite several cases, in support of their views :

First, Mooklar v. Lewis, 40 Ind. 1. In this case three-paragraphs of answer were filed; the first setting up a. mistake ; the second, that the note was without consideration ; and the third, false and fraudulent representations, and that the article bought was without value.

None of these paragraphs were tested by a demurrer.

After a general verdict for the defendant, and special interrogatories sustaining the general verdict, this court very properly refused to reverse the case — there being an answer of want of consideration filed, which would sustain the verdict, whether the other paragraphs were good or not. It does not decide the question presented in this ease by a demurrer to the first paragraph of answer, which does not aver any warranty, nor any fault or fraud in the vendor.

The ease of Dickinson v. Hall, 14 Pick. 217, was on a note given for a void patent, and it was held to be a good defence under a plea of want of consideration. Here the vendee did not get the thing he bought, for if the patent was void it was no patent. This is quite different from getting the thing you bought which had no value, and without any fault in the vendor.

In the ease of Perley v. Balch, 23 Pick. 283, the doctrine is thus stated: “If a chattel be of no value to any one, it cannot be the basis of a bargain; but if it be of any value to either party, it may be a good consideration for a promise. If it is beneficial to the purchaser, he certainly ought to pay for it. If it be a loss to the seller, he is entitled to remuneration for his loss.”

But this doctrine will not sustain the views of the appellants. It does not appear by the answer in question that the horse had no value to the vendor, nor that parting [478]*478with, the horse was not a “ loss to the seller.” There are many things in commerce, which have no intrinsic value, and many things of no commercial value, which may have a special value to the owner or some particular person.

It appears to us that the case of Johnson v. Titus, 2 Hill, 606, cited hy the appellants, is against them. There the court charged the jury, that, “ If fraud was not made out, the article being of no value would not constitute a defence ; and he refused to charge that the trees being dead or worthless would be a defence.” The plaintiff recovered, and the Court of Appeals denied a new trial. This case expresses our own minds.

In the cases of Dill v. O’Ferrell, 45 Ind. 268, and The Lafayette Agricultural Works v. Phillips, 47 Ind. 259, the defence was a warranty, and that the article had no value; and it was held that the vendee need not return the chattel; but these cases do not decide that an answer of “ no value ” is a good defence, when uncoujfied with a warranty or fraud.

In the case of Detrick v. McGlone, 46 Ind.

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62 Ind. 474, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/myers-v-conway-ind-1878.