70 



"WHAT DISEASES CONSTITUTE INSOUNDNESS OR VICE. 



Tnrotkl Gland ulcerated 97 



Foil-evil id. 



Fumiced Feet id. 



Quidding id. 



Quittor id. 



Fat-tails 98 



Fearing id. 



Fhenmatism id. 



Fing-hone id. 



Foaring 99 



Fecisions on the Subject id. 



Foiling 100 



Funning aicag id. 



Saddle-galls id. 



Fimple on a Horse's Skin .... 101 

 Question for the Jury id. 



Sallenders id. 



Sandcrack id. 



Scab 102 



Statute of Hen. 8 id. 



Shivering id. 



Shying id. 



Shying a result of short-sighted- 

 ness id. 



Sidebones 103 



Slipping the Collar id. 



Spavin id. 



Speedy-cut id. 



Splint id. 



Decision on the Subject 104 



Sprai)! and Thickening of the Back 



Sinews 104 



Star-gazer , . 105 



Ewe-necked id. 



Strangles id. 



Stringhalt id. 



Held to be cm Unsoundness .... id. 

 Thickening of the Back Sinews. . 107 



Thick-wind id. 



Thinness of Sole id. 



Held not an JJnsoiindness .... id. 



Thoroughpin 108 



Thrush id. 



Tripping id. 



Vicious to clean 109 



Vicious to shoe id. 



Wall-eyed id. 



Warbles id. 



Warts id. 



Water-farcy id. 



Weak-foot id. 



Weaving 110 



Wheezing id. 



Whistling id. 



Wilremhaunch id. 



Wind-galls id. 



Wind-sucking Ill 



Wolf's-tooth id. 



Yellou-s id. 



UNSOUNDNESS AND VICE. 



Present state In buying and selling Horses, it is of tlie utmost import- 

 of the law. ancB to ascertain what constitutes Unsoundness, and what 

 habits are to be considered Vices. Until comparatively 

 lately there had been much perplexity on these j)oints ; no 

 correct rule as to unsoundness had been laid down, and 

 a difference of opinion existed among the Judges whether 

 or not a temporary disease was, during its existence, a 

 breach of a warranty of soundness. The law on these 

 subjects has been in a great measure settled by the 

 Judges of the Court of Exchequer, where Mr. Baron Parke 

 laid down a rule with regard to JJtisov.ndness, by which, 

 so far as the nature o*f the subject mil admit, all future 

 cases will be governed, it being the result of the deliberate 

 consideration of the Court (a). The same learned judge 



{a) Kiddell v. Barnard, 9 M. & 

 W. 670 ; Coates v. Stephens, 2 M. & 

 Rob. 157. These cases have been 

 followed in America in Kornegay v. 



White, 10 Ala. 255; Fobcrts v. Jen- 

 kins, 1 Foster (N. H.) 116; Thomp- 

 son V. Berfrand, 23 Ark. 730. 



