Coon v. Reed

Brady, .J.

The assignor of the plaintiff sold and delivered a hofise to the defendant on a Saturday, and the defendant promised to pay the price demanded on the following Monday. He declined, however, to do so, alleging that the horse was lame, and that the warranty of soundness given at the time of the sale had been violated. Tlie defendant then insisted upon the vend- or’s talcing back the horse, which being declined ho sent him to a livery stable. After lie bad remained there for some weeks, tbe vendor took him into his possession, and having assigned the claim which he made against the defendant, this action was brought to recover for the expenses incurred in curing the horse, the amount paid for his keeping, and the loss sustained by the failure of the defendant to perform his agreement. After proof of the facts and the damages, the justice dismissed the complaint, upon the ground that the contract had been rescinded by tbe vendor, and that be bad, therefore, no cause of action. The proof, in the case, establishes the fact that the horse was not lame at tbe time of the salo and delivery, and, in the absence of proof to tbe contrary, the leg d presumption is, that he was lamed while in the possession of the defendant, and intermediate the delivery and the demand of payment, and the day agreed upon. The right of the vendor to have sued upon the original contract seems to he conceded. The salo was perfect, and the vendor was not obliged to take the horse back in the absence of proof *513of fraud, or tbe violation or falsity of the warranty. The defendant, having sent the horse to livery, was responsible for his keep, there being no privity between the keeper of the horse and the vendor. The latter, however, by reducing the horse again to his possession, waived his right of action for the price, and rescinded the contract of sale. In James v. Colton (7 Bing. 266), the plaintiff engaged to let land to the defendant on building leases, and to lend him £6,000 to assist him in the erection of twenty houses on the land. The defendant agreed to build the houses and convey them as security for the loan, which was to be paid at a time agreed upon. When the six houses had been built, and part of the £6,000 had'bcen advanced, the plaintiff requested the defendant not to go on with the other fourteen houses, and the defendant desisted. It was held that Wnis amounted to a recision of the contract by mutual consent, and the plaintiff was allowed to recover the amount advanced, on a' count for money lent. And although the contract here might be regarded as rescinded, the vendor was entitled to be placed in stala quo. The contract being rescinded, the recision extended back to the Saturday when the horse was delivered, and the defendant would be liable, as a bailee, for damage?, on proper proof; but whether that bo so or not, the defendant having received the horse on a contract of sale which ho refused to perform, and the horse presumptively having been injured in his possession, the plaintiff was entitled to be placed in statu quo, and I think he was also entitled to recover for the expenses of curing the lameness of the horse, by way of damages. Of this there was no proof, and the judgment was therefore right.

Judgment affirmed.