
    RIDDICK HURDLE v. LEWIS H. RICHARDSON.
    On a bond,.payable twelve months after date, expressed to be for the hire-of a slave for a year, the plaintiff is entitled to recover, notwithstanding the fact, that the plaintiff got possession of the slave and detained him against the- wishes of the hirer before the year was out.
    Action of debt, tried before Manly, J., at the-last Superior Court of Perqnimons county; begun by a warrant of a justice of the-peace, and brought up by successive appeals.
    The action was brought on the following-bond':
    “Twelve months after date, we, or either of us, promise to pay to Riddick Hurdle, or order, ninety-five-dollars, for value received, as'witness our hands and seal's;-for the hire of a boy, "Wesley, for the- year 1858, and comply with the usual terms of clothing.
    January, 1st, 1858..
    Signed,
    Lewis- H. Richardson, [seal.]
    
    Thomas-R. Simpson, [seed.].
    
    
      The said' slave, Wesley, served the defendant until the middle of December, 1858, when lie ran away, and his services were lost to him for the remainder of the year. On the 21th of December, the slave was apprehended as a runaway at the request of the defendant, and while the persons-having him in charge were taking him to Richardson, the plaintiff demanded him of the captors and took him into possession. On the same day, the plaintiff, without the consent of the defendant, gave Wesley a permit, in writing, to pass and repass, and to procure work in the counties-, of Gates, Chowan and Perquimons, until the 1st of January ensuing.
    The- foregoing facts were agreed on by the counsel of the respective parties, and submitted for the judgment of the Court, who gave judgment that the plaintiff was entitled to recover the amount of the bon.d and interest, from which the-defendant appealed..
    Jordan, for the plaintiff.'
    
      W. A. Moore, for the defendant..
   Manly, J.

There is no error in the judgment of the Court below. The words “ for the hire of a boy, Wesley, for the year 1858,” incorporated into the bond, do not import a condition precedent or a covenant for the service of the slave, but is simply a reference to a transaction, (viz., the hire of a slave) which formed the consideration of the bond. It is the form commonly adopted for securing the money for the annual hire of slaves throughout our country, and it has never-been construed to involve a condition or covenant, dependant upon which the money is promised. The construction thus* given is not affected, as we think, by the fact, that the day of' payment is fixed at the close of the term of service.. There-are obvious reasons for this postponement, discoverable in-the contents of the paper, without holding the service a condition precedent, upon which depended the money payment.

According to this construction of the bond, it will follow, in obedience to well-established principles, that the entire sum of money secured should be recovered, subject to no deduction for a partial failure of consideration. The bond not being void for any reason, it is wholly recoverable in a court of law, and if the defendant have substantial cause of complaint, he must seek his remedy through a cross action.

The case before us is distinguishable from that of Niblett v. Herring, 4 Jones’ Rep. 262, to which our attention lias been called. This latter case was an action of assumpsit, arising out of a contract for the-service of a slave for a year, and it appeared that when the service was about half performed, the plaintiff took the slave away from the defendant against his will. It was held in that case, that the contract for service was entire and executory, and an action for the promised compensation, or for a quemfoom meruit, could not be maintained, because of the entiretj^ of the contract upon which the promise was based — its non-performance, and the absence of all legal excuse for the failure. In the case before us, the contract, forming the consideration of the bond, (viz., the tradition of the slave, with a right of dominion over him) being executed, and a bond taken for the money, we cannot go behind the bond and enquire whether the obligee has not done something to interfere with the obligor’s rights, and thus impair the value of the consideration. A bond without any consideration, or, with an inadequate consideration, .is good in a court of law. Nothing in respect to consideration is enquirable into except immoral or illegal taint.

We think the ruling in the case of Niblett v. Herring, maybe justified under the authorities cited by the Court. The distinctions taken in such cases are often quite subtile, and not always characterised by very manifest differences, but upon the facts of that case, it would seem clear, there could be no recovery upon the special promise, and that the law would not raise an assumpsit to pay any less amount upon the quantum meruit count.

Per Curiam,

Judgment affirmed.  