Perrine v. Serrell

30 N.J.L. 454
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedFebruary 15, 1864
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 30 N.J.L. 454 (Perrine v. Serrell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Perrine v. Serrell, 30 N.J.L. 454 (N.J. 1864).

Opinion

Ogden, J.

The action below was for the recovery of damages for a breach of warranty contained in a contract for the sale of a horse.

A verdict was rendered in favor of the plaintiff below, and judgment entered thereon.

The first error assigned is, that the court refused to non-suit the plaintiff below because, as alleged by the plaintiff in error, the sale was not absolute touching the warranty, but that Perrine had a right to furnish another horse in place of the one which was the subject of the sale. The whole contract was made in writing, by letters passing between them,, the seller living in Freehold, the buyer living in New York. The plaintiflj after looking at the animal, called the Bashaw colt,” in Freehold, returned to the city, and on the 21st of January, 1861, wrote to Perrine as follows:

The end of this week, or the beginning of next, if you will please write me word what day you will send the Bashaw [456]*456■colt (price as spoken $200, and warrant it sound in all re.spects) up by the boat, I will be there with my horse which ■can return by the boat on the same day. I will also send you one hundred dollars on account, and you to allow me yRat is just for my horse; and if on trial the horse suits, I will pay the balance, or if not you are to get me such horse as will suit.”

On the 23d of January, the defendant replied by letter, as follows:

“ I received yours of the 21st, stating you would like me to send you the Bashaw colt. I will do so, and warrant him ■sound and kind. If he does not suit you, I will take him back and send you one that’will. I will send him up on Saturday morning. Please have your horse to send back by my man. The price of this colt is $200. Send your check for $100, — -your horse I will allow you all he is worth. When I see you all things I think will be satisfactory. I make it my business to make it so.”
“ P. S. The horse will come up with the Keyport from Xeyport, N. J.”

On the 26th January, Perrine sent the horse to New York in charge of one Shepherd, his employee, together with the following letter:

“We send to-day the black colt as agreed to — you will please enclose the money or check in an envelope, and- remit .it by the bearer, Edward Shepherd, and much oblige
Yours resp’ty, John D. Perrine, by
D. M. Reed.”

The horse was received by the plaintiff in New York, and Re sent his own horse to the defendant by Shepherd, with the following letter:

“ Jan’y 26, 1851.

Herewith I send you a certified check for $100, payable to your order, which can be drawn in any of your banks, on .account of,Bashaw colt, as agreed by letters which have passed between us.” Then adding some characteristics of his •own horse.

[457]*457Perrine received the horse and check through his agent,, Shepherd. It did not appear that any valuation was fixed by either party, then or at any other time, upon the plaintiff’s horse, nor was there any testimony of his value offered at the trial. On the afternoon of the day on which the coir, was sent to the city, he coughed considerably. He was well taken care of and nursed. He grew worse from day to day, and in a month afterwards died from inflammation of the trachea and lungs.

It was contended by Perrine in support of the first error assigned, that by the terms of the contract, the right to provide another horse extended to unsoundness; that it was a part of the warranty, and that the plaintiff could not recover damages until he proved that he had called upon Perrine to furnish another horse, and that Perrine had refused to do so.

This is not the true construction of the contract. The warranty, as to soundness, was complete and independent of the undertaking, that if the horse did not suit he might be returned, and another which would suit might be furnished, in In's place. The defendant below could not have warranted fliat the horse would suit. This was not a subject matter of warranty, because it might depend upon the taste of the plaintiff, as to gait, style, speed, &c. It did not refer to nnexisting quality or condition of the animal. The plaintiff below could not have fulfilled the terms upon which he was entitled to call for another horse, because the colt died upon his hands from a disease, which the jury found existed when the contract of sale and purchase was made. If the horse had been sound, from aught that appears in this ease, he might have suited the plaintiff in all respects contemplated in the condition.

Again, the plaintiff might immediately on delivery have resold the horse in good faith before the malady of which lie died had developed itself, with his warranty of soundness, and have thus deprived himself of the ability to make return ; but in such case, if he became liable for damages on his warranty, could it have been said that he could not have [458]*458fallen back upon the defendant because he did not first offer to return the horse ? There is nothing in the terms of the ■contract which prevented the plaintiff from treating the warranty' as extending only to soundness and kindness.

Another error assigned is, that the court erred in instructing the jury that the risk of the horse was upon Perrine ■until he was delivered in New York.

I think that the letters sustain the court in that position. The plaintiff was not -to pay until the colt was received in the ■city. If a creditor of the plaintiff had attached the animal within the jurisdiction of this state, could the process have held him against the defendant as the owner? Or if the ■defendant had gone with the horse, to New York, and sold him to a third party there, could the plaintiff have maintained ■trover for him against the purchaser ?

The trial by Serrell, which was to precede the purchase, was to be made in New York, and within a reasonable time; hence the title and ownership must have continued in the •defendant until a fair opportunity was offered for making the trial. It appears, in the case, that the plaintiff, after receiving the horse, drove him several times without complaining of his qualities; and from the evidence, it is fair to assume that he would have been satisfied, if a serious unsoundness had not have been discovered. It is not the case' ■of an absolute sale made at Keyport, with possession remaining in the seller merely as a lien, or to secure the payment of ■the purchase money.

Another error assigned is, that the judge instructed the jury, that their verdict could in no way depend upon the value of the plaintiff’s horse.

How could the value of that horse enter into the question ■of damages? Serrell was to give $200 for the colt. He paid $100 in cash, in New York, and at the same time passed his own horse over to Perrine, at what he might be worth, •on account of the balance. The defendant never informed •the plaintiff of his estimate of the value of the horse sent to .him. If he would not at the time fetch enough to make up [459]*459the full price of $200, Perrine had his action against Serrell for the balance. There was no error in this instruction of the •court.

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Bluebook (online)
30 N.J.L. 454, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perrine-v-serrell-nj-1864.