The hire of a slave, for a stipulated period, is a purchase of the services of the slave for that time, the rever-sionary interest remaining in the owner. The hirer, in addition to the express contract of the parties, which, in general, only provides for the price and time of service, impliedly stipulates, that he will treat the slave humanely, and provide for his necessary wants. That in sickness, he will provide necessary medical aid, and will not require him to labor when physically unable to do so. In the case of a hired horse, it has been held, that after the animal is exhausted, and has refused its feed, the hirer is bound not to use it; and if he does, and the horse is injured, it is a violation of the bailment, for wh ch the h.reris responsble. [1 Niel Gow. 1.]
The conduct of the defendant, in refusing to piovide the necessary medical aid, and in requiring the slave to labor when physically unable, was a violation of the contract of hiring, and being an injury to the reversion, authorizes the owner to rescind the contract, and repossess himself peaceably of the slave, or to consider the contract as still subsisting, and supply the necessary wants of the slave himself.
In Rasco and Brantley v. Willis, [5 Ala Rep. 38,] we held, that if a hired negro was employed by the hirer in such dishonest pursuits as necessarily to familiarize him to the commission of crime, and to debauch his morals, that the owner might rescind the contract, and resume the possession of Ins slave; the ground of the dec.sion being the injury to the reversion, and the violation of the implied stipulation, that the slave should be employed in some honest pursuit. That the conduct of the hirer, in this case, was a violation of his contract, and threatened the destruction of the reversionary interest, is obvious from the mere statement of the case.
*473In Gibson v. Andrews, [4 Ala. Rep. 88,] it was hold, that the master was under both a mor d and legal obl.gnt.ou to supply the necessary wants of h.s slave. That th.s duty, wh.ch he owed both to the slave and the commun.ty, he could not absolve himself from by voluntarily porm.tt.ng the slave to be absent from him, unless he provided some one to stand in the relation of master to him: and in that case, he was held liable for necessary medical servmes rendered to the slave, who was abandoned by the hirer.
Here, although the slave was not abandoned by the hirer, he refused to call m necessary medical aid, and required him to labor, though physically unable. It is not necessary to inquire whether, in this case, as in the one just cited, the owner Would have been liable for medical services furnished without his request; as it is perfectly clear, that upon the refusal of the hirer so to do, he had the right to take the possession of the slave for the purpose of having medical aid afforded to him.
In this, it is difficult to see how the hirer could be prejudiced, as the owner was merely doing that wh.ch the hirer was under a legal and moral obligation to have done himself.
We have shown that the violation of the implied stipulations of the contract, authorized the owner to resemd it, when, according to the decision in Rasco & Brantley v. Willis, he would have been liable for the services actually performed according to the rate agreed on. We th.nlt, however, he might, if he chose, elect to cons.der the contract as still subsisting, by returning, or offering to return, the slave as soon as he was able to labor.
This right the hirer could not defeat by refus.ng to receive the slave when tendered. An offer to do an act, is equivalent to a performance, where the thing to be done is prevented by the party to be benefitted by it.
The result of this examination is, that the court erred in its charge to the jury, as well as in the rejection of the testimony proposed to be given m evidence; and its judgment is, therefore, reversed, and the cause remanded.