
    Hewes Scull, appellant, vs. Joseph Higgins, appellee.
    1. In an action on tlie case for failure to perform a parol contract, the time of making it is not material, and hence, where it was alleged to be made on the 19th of September, 1828, to take effect in forty days, and the breach of it was assigned to have occurred the next day, it will be presumed after verdict, that it was proven that the breach occurred after the expiration of forty days; and it is error to arrest the judgment.
    2. The contract shows a cause of action.
    November, 1829.
    — Appeal from Hempstead Circuit Court, determined before Benjamin Johnson, Thomas P. Eskridge, James Woodson Bates, and William Trimble, judges.
   Opinion oe the Court. — This was an action on the case brought by Scull for the breach of a parol contract to deliver a keelboat. The declaration charged, that on the 19th day of September, 1828, the defendant, in consideration, etc., promised to deliver the said boat forty days from the date, and assigns for breach, that the defendant, on the 20th day of September, sold the said boat to Rafelle and Notrebe. The suit was brought on the 20th of September, 1828, the day after the contract is charged to have been made. A trial was had, and the jury found for Scull, and a motion to arrest the judgment was sustained, from which the plaintiff took an appeal. The errors assigned for arresting the judgment, were: 1. There was no cause of action ; 2. The action was premature; 3. There is no sufficient breach. The second objection was mostly relied on in the argument, namely, that the action was premature. The contract was laid to be on the 19th of September, 1828, to take effect forty days thereafter, and were this an action on a specialty, the objection would be valid; but in this form of action the time is not material, and the plaintiff might, and we are bound to presume did, prove the contract to have been made at a prior date to the day laid, and that the time given to deliver the boat had expired. 1 Chitty, 288. This is equally applicable to the third objection, since we will presume that a sufficient breach had been proven on the trial. As to the first objection, that there was no cause of action, we think there was a cause of action, and the damages which the plaintiff sustained by reason of a breach, a proper subject of inquiry by the jury. Reversed.  