Court Opinion

ID: 7367302
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-27 23:52:55.382481+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:20:48.306188
License: Public Domain

MAYFIELD, J.
This petition is for a certiorari to the Court of Appeals to review and revise the judgment and decision of that court in the cause of Tommie Pritchett v. U. G. Fife, 8 Ala. App. 462, 62 South. 1001, on appeal from the circuit court of Pickens county. Every ruling of the trial court and of the Court of Appeals adverse to the defendant in the trial court (appel*386lant in the Court of Appeals, and petitioner here) is assigned and insisted upon as error. The action in the-trial court was detinue for two mules and a set of harness. The trial resulted in verdict and judgment for the plaintiff. The defendant appealed to the Court of Appeals, and the judgment was by that court affirmed. The defendant now applies to this court for certiorari to correct and revise the judgment and decision of the Court of Appeals, and, as stated above, assigns every adverse ruling as error.
We have carefully examined the record in the Court of Appeals, together with the opinion of that court, and we find no error.
The defendant’s theory of the case is based on an entirely false premise, as was pointed out by the Court of Appeals. The defendant was a minor, and attempted to defeat the action of detinue on the ground that he was a minor, and so was not bound by his warranty or contracts.
The plaintiff did not seek to recover the property in question on any contract or warranty of the defendant, but sought to recover on the ground and theory that the defendant had obtained the property from plaintiff by actual fraud, and hence that the defendant’s infancy was not a defense as against an actual fraud committed by the infant.
Plaintiff and defendant had swapped mules and harness. Defendant represented that the mules he swapped were perfectly sound, when, as a matter of fact, they were not sound, on'e of them being a “choker” and wholly worthless; and, when plaintiff discovered the fraud, he promptly rescinded the trade, tendering the defendant his mules and harness, and demanding his own. Defendant refused to deliver to plaintiff, and the latter brought an action of detinue to recover.
*387If plaintiff had sued upon the warranty, this defense of minority would have been availing; but he did not sue upon the warranty. He treated the transaction (as he had a right to do) as a palpable fraud practiced upon him by the defendant, and rescinded the trade on account thereof, and brought detinue to recover back his mules. Infancy is no defense to such an action, as is well pointed out by the Court of Appeals. Nearly all of the defendant’s argument is based on the erroneous supposition that infancy was a defense to the action, even though the infant had perpetrated an actual fraud upon the plaintiff.
It is wholly useless to treat each of the petitioner’s insistences separately; but all have been examined, and found to be without merit, and to have been fully answered by the opinion in the Court of Appeals. See Pritchett v. Fife, 8 Ala. App. 462, 62 South. 1001.
Certiorari denied.
All the Justices concur.