Smock v. Warford

4 N.J.L. 306
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedFebruary 15, 1816
StatusPublished

This text of 4 N.J.L. 306 (Smock v. Warford) 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
Smock v. Warford, 4 N.J.L. 306 (N.J. 1816).

Opinion

Kirkpatrick C. J.

This was an action of debt upon a single bill. The original writ was for £. 22. 2 s. York money, equal to 55 dollars, 25 cents, with lawful interest for the same. The declaration was for the same sum, and concluded, to the damage of the plaintiff 150 dollars. The defendant pleaded payment, and in support of his plea, at the trial, offered to give in evidence,

1. That the plaintiff gave him a letter of attorney in 1798, to pursue and arrest a negro slave of the plaintiff’s who had run away; and that the plaintiff agreed that if the defendant would go in pursuit of the said negro and bring him back or cause him to return, he would pay him one half of the negro; that the defendant did go in [350]*350pursuit of the negro, but did not see him; and that in consequence of the pursuit, the negro returned ; and that the plaintiff afterwards sold him for a sum which the defendant offered to prove.

To this evidence the plaintiff objected, and it was overruled by the court, and a bill of exceptions taken. '

2. The defendant also offered to give in evidence, that in 1798 a negro slave, belonging to the plaintiff, ran away from *him; that the plaintiff employed defendant to pursue and arrest him; that the defendant went in pursuit, and that in consequence thereof, the negro returned to his master. That the defendant expended money and underwent fatigue in this business, for which he claimed a compensation by way of off-set.

To this evidence also, the plaintiff objected, and it was overruled by the court and a bill of exceptions taken.

The jury found that the defendant did not pay to the plaintiff the sum of 55 dollars, 25 cents, with interest, and that there is due to the plaintiff 118 dollars, 17 cents, with six cents costs.

The judgment is that the plaintiff do recover his said debt of 118 dollars, 17 cents, and damages and costs which are left blank in the record.

The first error assigned in this judgment, is founded upon the bills of exception.

And as to the first of these. Nothing can be more fully settled than that damages arising on a special contract, cannot be made matter of set-off in an action of debt. And in this case the defendant does not even offer to prove performance, specifically, on his part; he does not pretend, either that he brought the negro back or caused him to return, for though he pursued, he did not see him. The returning of the negro in consequence of the pursuit, being, as may be inferred, a voluntary thing in the negro himself, and in no way procured by the defendant, does not appear to me to be a fulfilment of the contract on his part. But even if this were otherwise, it does not better the case, for surely half a negro is not matter of set-off. And that the plaintiff afterwards sold him for a specific sum does not mend the matter. The plaintiff’s liability upon his special contract must first be [351]*351established, and that either by the concurrence of the panics, or in an action on the contract itself. For it is not because a jury cannot ascertain the damages on a special contract, that it cannot be set off in an action of debt, but it is because the policy of the law will not permit matters of a nature so totally distinct, and which require pleadings so totally different, to be blended together in one action.

Then as to the second bill of exceptions. The defendant having been overruled by the court in offering his special contract, lays it down as a principle, that after performance the party may waive his special contract, and have assumpsit (and if as*sumpsit, set-off) for the value of the work done or service performed ; and therefore maintains that the matter secondly offered in evidence ought to have been permitted to go to the jury. lie gives in support of this, what justice Denison says in 1 Wilson 115, and also 2 Ld. Ray. But I think what has been claimed on this subject, goes far beyond the principle of the cases cited. If I make a contract for the building of a house, or for the completion of any piece of mechanism, for a sum certain, and the house be actually built or the mechanism completed, according to contract, shall it be in the power of the party performing to abandon the contract, and to recover according to the number of days he may have spent upon it, or the expense, in money, which it may have cost him ?

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1 Wilson 114 (Indiana Super. Ct., 1872)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 N.J.L. 306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smock-v-warford-nj-1816.