Oldham v. Bentley

45 Ky. 428, 6 B. Mon. 428, 1846 Ky. LEXIS 27
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 28, 1846
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 45 Ky. 428 (Oldham v. Bentley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oldham v. Bentley, 45 Ky. 428, 6 B. Mon. 428, 1846 Ky. LEXIS 27 (Ky. Ct. App. 1846).

Opinion

Jutfaii ÉÉarshai.1,

delivered, the opinion of the Court.

This is an action on the case, brought by Bentley foif an alledged deceit practised on him by the defendants in procuring the sale to one of them, of “a family- negro slave.” The declaration avers in substance, that.being under the necessity of selling said slave, he was willing to self her to a citizen of Madison county, to be kept in his or her family, for his or her own .use, , but was unwilling to sell her to be taken by slave dealers to the south; and that the defendants being well apprised of this, fraudulently and deceitfully combined, and for the purpose of inducing him to sell the slave to them, or one of them, falsely represented that they, or one of them, wished to purchase her for his or their own use, in Madison county, Kentucky, where they resided, and not for the purpose of selling her to be taken off by slave dealeis to the south ; that said slave was worth, and the plaintiff could have sold her to slave dealeis to be taken to the south, for MOO, but would not sell her for any such purpose; all which the defendants well knew at the time of their iepiesentalions aforesaid ; that at the time of making said representations, they intended to purchase, not for their own use to be kept, &c., but with the fraudulent in-tentian of selling her for profit, to be carried directly by a slave dealer, to the southern market; that the plaintiff, giving credit to the representations aforesaid, made by the defendants, sold and delivered said slave to them, ór one of them, for the reduced price of $325; and that the defendants, intending to deceive and defraud the plaintiff, did not keep the said slave in Madison county, for the use of them, or either of them, but very shortly after the' purchase, sold her to a slave dealer or his agent to take to the south, and thereby deceived and defrauded the [429]*429plaintiff and caused great distress and anxiety of mind in him and his family.

Judgment of the Circuit Court.

A demurrer to this declaration having been overruled, the defendants filed separate pleas of not guilty, and a verdict having been found for the plaintiff, a judgment was rendered in his favor for $100, the damages assessed by the jury. A motion for a new trial was overruled ; and the demurrer having been virtually withdrawn by the pleas, the case stands before this Court upon the questions: 1st. Whether under the liberal construction and favorable implication to which the declaration is entitled, after a verdict for the plaintiff, it presents substantially a cause of action. ' 2d, Whether the evidence authorized the finding of the facts essential to the support of the cause of action thus presented. And Sd. Whether there was any error in the opinions of the Court during the trial, which should impair the effect of the verdict and entitle the defendants to a new trial. To sustain the judgment each of these questions must be answered in the affirma. tive.

1. If the defendants combined for the purpose stated in the declaration, it is immaterial to the cause of action against both, to which of them the sale was actually made ; and the want of certainty in the averment on this point, is unavailable, at any rate after verdict. The case presented is that the defendants knowing the necessity and the disposition of the plaintiff as stated, combined to effect the purchase and sale of the slave for their joint profit, and that by inducing the plaintiff, by their false representations, to believe that they would keep her in the county, and not.sell her for exportation, while at the time they intended so to sell her for the purpose of gain, they did procure the sale to one of themselves, at a reduced price, and did, soon after, re-sell her for their joint benefit, to be directly exported to the south. The fair implication is, that the slave, in consequence of the false representations of the defendants, was sold to them for less than she was worth; that in pursuance of their previous design, she was speedily ie-sold for her full value, for a purpose in direct opposition to their previous representations, and in violation of the motives of the plain[430]*430tiff, to which those representations had been addressed, and under which he had been induced, by his confidence in them, to sell the slave to the defendants.

A vendor of a ¡slave in consideration oí a promise by vendee not to talco him out of the Stale, sold the slave at less than his value, the vendee violated his promise to keep the slave within the State — Held that he was liable to Vendor for difference between the price given and the value of the slave, or if such representations, made with the view to oh, tain the slave at less than his value, and it has that effect, when the intent is to obtain the slave at a low price and not to adhere to the promise, it is fraudulent and renders the purchaser liable if violated.

The declaration, when thus most favorably construed, presents a case not heretofore decided by this Court, But the case of Turner vs Johnson, (7 Dana, 435,) decides in effect, that a promise by the purchaser of a slave, not-to sell him out of the State or county, when constituting a part of the contract of sale, and made in consideration of obtaining the slave at a reduced price in consequence of such promise, is valid, and that its violation by the purchaser, is a good ground of action by the vendor. We think the reasoning of the opinion in that case, establishes its conclusion upon solid foundations.

The promise with regard to the future-disposition of the slave being a part of the consideration of the sale, and being the entire consideration for a reduction of tho price, these also constitute a consideration for the promise, which renders it valid and causes its breach to be in law, an injury to the vendor, for which the law will furnish redress. But representations of (,ho same import as to the intention of the purchaser, may also, if confided in, constitute a part of the consideration of a sale, and the entire consideration for the reduction of price; and although if made in good faith, and not amounting to a promise, they may not, like a promise, impose a permanent obligation for the future ; yet it seems certain, that if made with the view and with the effect of thereby obtaining the advantage of a purchase at a reduced price, the party making them must be held bound, both in morals and law, for their being true at the time, and made with the purpose of acting accordingly. If so made and not amounting to a promise, a subsequent change of purpose not being provided against by the exaction of a promise, might not constitute a legal ground of action. This would be a case of damnum absque injuria. But if the representations are made with the intention, at the time, of deceiving the vendor, and of inducing him thereby to make the sale, and at a reduced price, in the faith of representations, which the purchaser, at the time, did not intend to observe, and therefore knew to be false, [431]*431they are fraudulent, and a subsequent sale in direct violation of them, constitutes'not only a loss, but in point of law,, an injury to the vendor.

Where two defendants were charged with combining in order to commit a fraud, if there be any proof of combination the declaration of one is, in the absence of the other, properly left to the jury, with instructions that if they believed, there was a combination, the evidence was competent against both, otherwise against the party making it aione.

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Related

Howard v. Commonwealth
70 S.W. 1055 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1902)
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62 Am. Dec. 739 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1855)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
45 Ky. 428, 6 B. Mon. 428, 1846 Ky. LEXIS 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oldham-v-bentley-kyctapp-1846.