The judge, after being requested to instruct the jury on various points, declined to do so, and directed the jury to find a verdict for the plaintiffs for the whole amount claimed. This withdrew every question from the jury, and could not be correct, if there were any clashing of testimony on a material point. The judge stated the ground of his decision to be, that repacked cotton was a damaged article, and that the rules of law touching a sale by sample did not apply to such a sale. • The defendants excepted. • If cotton is damaged, and it is sold by sample, that sample should be a fair specimen of the whole, of the bad as well as the good; and if the seller chooses to warrant that the whole corresponds with the sample, he is liable if it turn out different, although it was also sold as a damaged article. One witness said that Maltbie, the broker, for the sellers, assured him that the samples were fairly and honestly drawn, and that he might depend upon the bales turning out, when opened, equal to the samples; and that it was clearly understood between him and Maltbie that the cottons were to prove equal to the samples. If this was not conclusive evidence of an agreement to warrant, it was enough to go to the jury on that question. So Maltbie, for the sellers, said, we guarantee our samples fairly drawn, and if there was any fraud, the defendants would have recourse to the plaintiffs; and he also says the cotton was sold by sample. Another witness says, Maltbie gave me his unqualified assurance that the cotton would prove equal to the samples; the word warranty or guaranty was used, and the word sample. The cotton, instead of answering the sample, had in each bale 150 pounds of refuse, consisting of oyster shells, small stones and sand, according to one witness, or 150 pounds of trash, to another. If this refuse were in mass, or were not casually adhering to the cotton, even without a warranty, the defendants could not be called on to pay for it; on a purchase of cotton by the pound, the buyer is not to pay for oyster shells and stones by the pound. If the jury had believed one witness, and him alone, as the judge perhaps did, that “repackedcotton” meant “ look out for. all sorts of stuff,” and this stuff included foreign stuff also, as stones, the verdict might have been right.
Mitchell, Morris and Clerlce, Justices.]
The objection now raised by the plaintiffs that the sale note is the only legal evidence of the terms of sale, was not raised on the trial. If raised it might possibly have been obviated. It is not necessary now to pass on that objection.
There should be a new trial; the costs to abide the event.