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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Jury Court Reports >> Morgan and Saunders, v. Hunter and Company. [1817] ScotJCR 1_Murray_256 (23 June 1817) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotJCR/1817/1_Murray_256.html Cite as: [1817] ScotJCR 1_Murray_256 |
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Page: 256↓
(1817) 1 Murray 256
CASES TRIED IN THE JURY COURT.
No. 24
Present, The Three Lords Commissioners.
An article commissioned, and on receipt returned to be repaired as damaged; found, that when repaired in terms of the letter returning it, any objection to the original construction is precluded.
This was an action to recover L. 61, 3s. 6d. as the price of a patent globe writing table.
Defence.—The table is composed of old materials, and is defective both in its form and the delineation on the globe.
“Whether the pursuers, upholsterers in London, in consequence of an order by the defenders, contained in a letter dated in the month of October 1813, did make, and in the month of January 1814, did ship for Leith, properly and carefully packed, a
Page: 257↓
Whether the said table was not returned to the said pursuers by the defenders, as having been injured in the packing, and carriage, and not made agreeable to order?
Whether, after the said table had remained for sometime at the warehouse of Adams and Company, Glasgow Wharf, London, unaccepted by the defenders, the said defenders, in the month of May 1814, had agreed to accept the same on certain conditions specified in a letter bearing date the 25th May 1814, and written by the defenders to Robert Liddle, manager of the Leith Shipping Company?
Whether, in pursuance of, and agreeably to, the terms of the last mentioned letter, the said table was put on board a smack in the port of London, to sail for the port of Leith, in June, 1814, in the condition required by the said last mentioned letter, and whether the same was not carefully and sufficiently packed for the voyage?
Whether, on the arrival at Leith, and on its being unpacked, the said table was in a condition such as was required by the defenders,
Page: 258↓
Whether the defenders did not wholly refuse to receive the said table, and to pay for the same to the damage of the said pursuers?”
The table had been injured on its way to Edinburgh, and was returned to be repaired; it was repaired and again sent down. In the letter mentioning the injury it had suffered, no objection was made to the price, or to the representation on the globe not being accurate. On its arrival, however, the second time, these were made the grounds of refusing payment, and a considerable part of the proof was an attempt to show that the price was too high.
Objections were taken to some of the interrogatories put to a witness examined on commission.
The
Patterson's Trustees, v. Johnston and Husband, Supra, 71.
His Lordship afterwards observed,—In a number of cases, the witnesses to the foundation of the contract have been examined on
Page: 259↓
In summing up the case to the Jury, his Lordship observed,—All that has been said of the table coming the first time from London is mere narrative, to make the case intelligible; the only question is on the letter ( 25th May 1814) when it was returned; the only objection then made is the damage it had sustained. If, therefore, you are of opinion that it was sufficiently repaired, and was complete on its return, (according to the terms of the letter,) you will find for the pursuer; if not proved complete, then for the defender. His Lordship then stated the evidence, and that he did not think they ought to diminish the sum claimed, because what was proved by
Page: 260↓
Verdict for the pursuer.
Counsel:
Jeffrey and
Boswell, for the Pursuers.
Grant and
Cockburn, for the Defenders.
Solicitors: (Agents, John Blair, w. s. and John Tait, jun. w. s.)
Dec. 17, 1817.
Jeffrey moved for expences.
Grant, for the defender, stated,—We offered, in writing, to refer the price of the table to two persons, which would have saved the expence of the trial. When this was formerly stated, the Court thought it could not be pleaded as a defence, but seemed to think it might enter into the question of expences.
Motions for expences should be made as soon as possible after the verdict is applied, when the circumstances are fresh in the recollection of the Judge.