By the Court.
Benning, J.delivering the opinion.
[1.] One of the pleas was, that the note sued on had been given for the hire of two negroes, for the year 1852 — a man at one hundred dollars — a woman at seventy-five dollars; that *104the plaintiff had agreed for the defendant to have the negroesduring the year 1852; that in consideration of the plaintiff’s-agreeing to this, the note had been given to him by the defendant, and that on the 13th of September, 1852, the plaintiff, without the defendant’s consent, took the woman from the defendant, into whose possession she had never returned — whereby, as the defendant insisted, the consideration of the note had partially failed.
Proof was received which supported this plea.
Then, this proof, on the motion of the plaintiff, was ruled out, the Court holding as follows: “that if it (the testimony) showed anything, it was that the plaintiff wa-s a trespasser;” “ that hiring a negro was a temporary purchase, and the owner had no right to the possession without the consent of the person hiring — if he possessed himself without his consent, he was liable in another form of action.”
This, no doubt, is a true statement of what, in such a case, the law is. Tompkins, the hirer, might have brought an action of trover for the negro, against Tigner, the moment the negro was taken by Tigner. There can be no doubt about that, I think. (Roberts vs. Wyatt, 2 Taunt. 268; and see Story on Bailments, §§396, 413.)
But admitting this to be so, it does not follow that this testimony ought to have been excluded; for although it be true that the hirer might have maintained trover for the injury, yet it is equally true, that for it he might, if he had pleased, have maintained assumpsit. The case was one of those in which the same thing may, perhaps, be considered to constitute both a tort and a breach of contract. The contract was, that the hirer was to have the negro for a full year. Before the end of the year, the owner, without leave, took back the negro. This was both a breach of the contract and a trover and conversion — a trover and conversion, because the hirer’s special property in the slave, acquired by the contract, had not expired.
And there are many cases of tort — pure tort, in which the tort may be waived and assumpsit or debt brought. It is laid *105down in Saunders on Pleading and Evidence, that “where there has been an express contract, the party injured may sustain assumpsit, though the breach amount to a trespass.” (1 Saund. Pl. & Ev. 166.) And doubtless he states the law correctly.
This being so, it follows that Tompkins, the hirer, might, in this ease, have sustained as well assumpsit as trover for his injury.
But if it was at his option to bring assumpsit, it was of course at his option to treat the injury, not as a tort, but as-a breach of contract.
He elected to treat the injury as a breach of contract.
Treated as a breach of the contract, the injury amounts to a partial failure of the consideration of the note/
What was the consideration of the note ? The owner undertook, that as far as in him lay, the hirer should have the use of the two negroes for the space of a year. This undertaking is implied in the contract of hiring for a year. This was the consideration.
Before the year was out, the owner, by his own act, without leave from the hirer, deprived the hirer of the use of one of the negroes for the rest of the year. This was a breach of his undertaking, and it clearly amounted to a partial failure of the consideration for which the note had been given.
And this having been pleaded as a partial failure of the consideration, evidence in support of the plea-should not have been excluded.
The evidence excluded, supported the plea. To exclude it, therefore, was an error.
In this decision is nothing to conflict with anything in the-decision in Lennard vs. Boynton, (11 Ga. R. 109)—a decision to the effect, that “ one to whom a slave is hired for a year, is entitled to no abatement of the price because of the death of the slave, after the commencement,” and before the end “of the term.” When one hires a slave to another for a term, although he does not undertake that the slave shall live out the *106term, he does undertake, that he will not, by any act of his, • deprive the hirer of the use of the slave for the term.
A similar rule prevails with respeet to the rent of lands.
The tenant “ may show that he has been evicted and kept out of the demised premises by the lessor, or by a stranger-having lawful title, and that the rent is thereby suspended.” (Comyn’s Land and Tent. 523.)