50 WARRANTY OF 



ment, or from usage in the breaking, or from malfor- 

 mation my opinion is that he is UNSOUND. 



The case has not been tried ; but as the law should be 

 governed by common sense, a jury, I feel confident, 

 would be of the same opinion ; for in this latter case it 

 is only by extreme care and not tiring the horse that 

 you can keep his legs from becoming raw. While the 

 legs are in that state any horse is UNSOUND. 



It requires care to keep him from falling. Cuts pre- 

 vent his doing the work of horses of his class with 

 ordinary care, and this renders him doubly dangerous, 

 as horsemen will not be troubled with so unsatisfactory 

 an animal. 



Where the horse has been cut through over-fatigue 

 or poverty, and has recovered from the weakness conse- 

 quent thereon, requiring no more care than other horses, 

 the wounds being healed, he is SOUND. 



Eat Tail. 



Eat tail is indiscriminately employed to describe the 

 tail of the horse when it is either quite free from hair 

 or partially so. It does not prevent the horse in any 

 way from being SOUND. 



Although unsightly, it is not a blemish that wil 

 enable the purchaser to return the horse, as it is impos- 

 sible not to notice so glaring a disfigurement. When 



