— Harris sued Hiatt to recover back money advanced by the former to the latter on a contract by which Hiatt sold to Harris fifty head of corn-fatted merchantable hogs, of the best fattened by the former, of a certain average weight, to be delivered and weighed at Jonesboro’, from the 1st to the 15th of November, 1866, on demand, Harris agreeing to pay $8 per hundred pounds gross, on delivery. Twenty hogs were delivered and paid for before the 1st of November. Hiatt, on demand within the time fixed, tendered thirty hogs at the place of delivery, only eleven of which were of the kind required by the contract. Harris offered to accept the eleven, but refused to take the residue.
On the trial, the appellant offered to prove that at the time he tendered the thirty hogs, upon the refusal of the appellee to receive them, the former offered to bring immediately and deliver to the latter, at the place specified, sueli hogs as would fill the contract, and such as the appellee demanded, which appellee refused to accept, or receive. The court refused to permit the evidence to go to the jury, to which action of the court the appellant excepted.
One of the causes assigned for a new trial is, “that the court erred on the trial in refusing to permit the defendant to offer testimony proper under the issue in the cause, to-wit, that when the defendant went to deliver the hogs named in the contract, and plaintiff* rejected a portion thereof, the defendant then offered to procure and deliver immediately such hogs as plaintiff* required, and that plaintiff refused to permit defendant to do so.”
The law on this subject is well settled in Shipp v. Bowen
In the case under consideration, the contract was one of sale of fifty hogs of the best fattened by the vendor. The legal presumption is, that the appellant, acting in good faith, offered the best hogs fattened by him, but which, not coming up to the weight required, the appellee refused to accept, and the offer was to supply the place of nineteen of these hogs with others of the proper weight. Moreover the offer was not a tender at the time and place, and the appellee was under no obligation to accept hogs not actually tendered. We think that the court committed no error in refusing the offered evidence.
It appears by a bill of exceptions that the appellant offered to prove, on the trial, that when the plaintiff got the twenty hogs before the day of delivery, the defendant told plaintiff he would not be able to fill the contract if ho now let plaintiff have twenty of his best hogs, and that plaintiff ,said it would not make any difference, that he would not object to them on that account, to which the appellee objected, and the court refused to admit the evidence, to which the appellant excepted. But this is not embraced in the motion for a new trial and cannot be considered by us.
The judgment is affirmed, with costs.