532 
VETERINARY JURISPRUDENCE. 
Cross-examined. — Webb said the running at the nose 
might have come from a fall, — my men said he had had a fall 
in a corpse-cart. Mr. Smith had had the horse, and he 
worked it with a rag over his own horse’s nose ; he said his 
own horse was given to biting, and as my horse had got a 
cold, his horse was more likely to catch it. I have never been 
what you call a horse jobber. I job in pigs. To my know- 
ledge I have never seen a glandered horse. I do not know 
one if I see it, or I should not have sent to Mr. Webb to look 
at this. Never asked plaintiff for the money for the horse, 
or threatened to put him in the county court. 
Thomas Law , horsekeeper to defendant. On the 6th of 
February, when plaintiff came to the farm, he said, Ci I am 
come to look at your horses,” and he went to the stable to 
look at the black horse ; he said it ran at the nose and smelt ; 
master said, “ I told you so ;” he said, a Surely, it is nothing 
catching;” and defendant told Mr. Webb said it was not; I 
had seen Mr. Webb examine him, and he said it was nothing 
catching, and told me to wash his nose with water and 
slacked lime. I told him the horse fell down in the corpse 
cart, and he said, it might come from a blow. My master 
gave plaintiff the price of the horse and went away ; plaintiff 
after that asked me about the horse, and saw him eat a bit 
of hay, and then said he should take him; and he did so and 
went away. I did not know the horse was glandered. I 
knew nothing of it but what Mr. Webb told me. 
Cross-examined— Have smelt cattle worse than that. Mr. 
Webb said the lime was to take away the smell. Defendant 
told Mizen he believed it was not catching. Webb said it 
was not; glanders was not mentioned. The horse never 
stood alone while with us — sometimes he stood with four. 
James Swan — I was at Bunten’s when Mizen came about 
the horse; Mizen said he did not like the scent of his breath, 
and Bunten said Webb told him it was not catching — it only 
came from a blow or a fall. 
Cross-examined. — I smelt the horse, and it w as very bad ; 
I had never seen anything much worse. 
— Smith — I live at Wimbish ; I had this horse four days ; 
I borrowed it, and Bunten mentioned its running at the nose, 
but said Mr. Webb told him it w^as nothing catching; I put 
a rag over my horse’s nose to prevent its biting, and as this 
had a cold I thought it might be catching ; the horse worked 
four days with mine — broadside with it, but my horse had no 
ill effects from it. 
Mr. Webb , of New Sampford, veterinary surgeon. — In Jan. 
was requested to examine the black horse, and described the 
