Irwin v. Bell

Decision Date31 December 1809
Citation1 Tenn. 485
PartiesIRWIN v. BELL.
CourtTennessee Circuit Court
OPINION TEXT STARTS HERE

Case.--The declaration contained a special count, as well as a general one, for goods, wares, and merchandise sold and delivered. It appeared to have been a contract for the delivery of cast-iron, for which corn was to be given.

The plaintiff's witness, on cross-examination, stated what the plaintiff had told him was the special agreement, but he knew nothing of it of his own knowledge, which was somewhat variant from the special agreement stated in the declaration. The witness also proved that he delivered the corn to Bell, the defendant.

The counsel for the defendant insisted that the plaintiff could not recover. Not upon the general count, because there was a special agreement proved different from the one alleged in the declaration. Nor could he recover on the count embracing the special agreement, for the plainest reason, because he did not prove it, but a different one.

Humphreys and Overton, JJ.

The plaintiff ought to recover on his general count, otherwise he might be without remedy. In this case, it is not even pretended that the defendant has attempted to comply with his part of the agreement. The plaintiff may put an end to it, throw it out of view, and recover the value of his corn which he has delivered. In this case the witness did not appear to be positive as to what was said by the plaintiff respecting the special agreement. We consider this evidence as coming from the part of the defendant; under such circumstances there would be an extreme hardship in turning the plaintiff out of court without redress. Suppose this case,--a special agreement is entered into, the plaintiff declares on it truly, conforms his proof to his pleading; the defendant produces proof, showing that the agreement was different in some respects, but no proof as to a compliance, with the agreement on his part. The plaintiff has paid the consideration; the jury believe he testimony on the part of the defendant with respect to the special agreement. In such case ought the defendant to defeat the plaintiff of all remedy? We think not. Be the agreement what it may, and the plaintiff who has paid the consideration falls short in proving some of the terms of the contract, or where there are small variations in proof he ought to be allowed, for justice's sake, to resort to his general count. But not so where an agreement altogether of a different nature is stated...

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