
    STEPHEN ELLIS and ROBERT ELZEY v. PETER G. WOOTTEN.
    Court of Chancery. Sussex.
    July 25, 1821.
    
      Ridgely’s Notebook III, 390.
    
    
      Hall and Robinson for complainants.
    
      Cooper and Wells for defendant. .
   The Chancellor,

finding this to be a question of fact, offered to the parties to make an issue to be tried by a jury. The parties refused, and submitted the case to him.

The Chancellor.

The bill must be dismissed. This is a bond given [for] the purchase money for a negro woman. The plaintiff contends the woman was never delivered to him, and that therefore the bond is without consideration. The testimony [of] James Wootten, confirmed by Hasting, Ellis and Culleny, clearly proves a delivery. The woman consented to go with him. He left her of his own accord to borrow a cart to remove her and the child and her chest and bed; before he returned she ran away. It was his folly to leave her. The woman deceived him, but the seller fully complied with his undertaking.  