3585. The amount of an express debt cannot be enlarged by application.

3586. Contracts for advertisements in Sunday newspapers cannot be enforced.

3887. A seller of goods, chattels, or other property, commits no fraud, in law, when he neglects to tell the purchaser of any flaws, defects, or unsoundness in the same.

3588. The opinions of witnesses, as to the value of a dog that has been killed, are not admissible in evidence. The value of the animal is to be decided by the jury.

3589. If any person puts a fence on or ploughs the land of another, he is liable for trespass, whether the owner has sustained injury or not.

3590. If a person, who is unable from illness to sign his will, has his hand guided in making his mark, the signature is valid.

3591. When land trespassed upon is occupied by a tenant, he alone can bring the action.

3592. To say of a person, "If he does not come and make terms with me, I will make a bankrupt of him, and ruin him," or any such threatening language, is actionable, without proof of special damage.

3593. In an action for slander, the party making the complaint must prove the words alleged; other words of like meaning will not suffice.

3594. In a suit of damages for seduction, proof of pregnancy, and the birth of a child, is not essential. It is sufficient if the illness of the girl, whereby she was unable to labor, was produced by shame for the seduction; and this is such a loss of service as will sustain the action.

3595. Addressing to a wife a letter, containing matter defamatory to the character of her husband, is a publication, and renders the writer amenable to damages.

3596. A parent cannot sustain an action for any wrong done to a child, unless he has incurred Borne direct be cuniary injury therefrom, in consequence of some loss of service, or expenses necessarily consequent thereupon.

3597. A master is responsible for an injury resulting from the negligence of his servant, whilst driving his cart or carriage, provided the servant is, at the time, engaged in his master's business, even though the accident happens in a place to which his master's business does not call him; but if the journey of the servant be solely for a purpose of his own, and undertaken without the knowledge or consent of his master, the latter is not responsible.

3598. An emigrant depot is not a nuisance in law.

3599. A railroad track through the streets is not a nuisance in law.

3600. In an action for libel, against a newspaper, extracts from such newspaper may be given to show its circu-ation, and the extent to which the libel has been published. The jury, in estimating the damages, are to look at the character of the libel, and whether the defendant is rich or poor. The plaintiff is entitled, in all cases, to his actual damages, and should be compensated for the mental sufferings endured, the public disgrace inflicted, and all other actual discomfort produced.

3601. Delivery of a husband's goods by a wife to her adulterer, he having knowledge that she has taken then) without her husband's authority, is (sufficient to sustain an indictment for larceny against the adulterer.

360*2. The fact that the insurer was not informed of the existence of im-pending litigation, affecting the premises insured, at the time the insurance was effected, does not vitiate the policy.

3603. The liability of an innkeceper is not confined to personal baggage, but extends to all the property of the guest that he consents to receive.

3604. When a minor executes a contract, and pays money, or delivers property on the same, he car not afterwards disaffirm such contract and recox or the money, or property, unless he restores to the other party the consideration received from him for such money or property.

3605. When a person has, by legal inquisition, been found an habitual drunkard, he cannot, even in his sober intervals, make contracts to bind himself or his property, until the inquisition is removed.

3606. Any person dealing with the representative of a deceased person, is presumed, in law, to be fully apprized of the extent of such representative's authority to act in behalf of such estate.

3607. In an action against a railroad company, by a passenger, to recover damages for injuries sustained on the road, it is not compulsory upon the plaintiff to prove actual negligence in the defendants; but it is obligatory on the part of the latter to prove that the injury was not owing to any fault or negligence of theirs.

3608. A guest is a competent witness, in an action between himself and an innkeeper, to prove the character and value of lost personal baggage. Money in a trunk, not exceeding the amount reasonably required by the traveller to defray the expenses of the journey which he has undertaken, is a part of his baggage; and in case of its loss, while at any inn, the plaintiff may prove its amount by his own testimony.

3609. The deed of a minor is not absolutely void. The court is authorized to judge, from the instrument, whether it is void or not, according to its terms being favorable, or unfavorable, to the interests of the minor.

3610. A married woman can neither sue nor be sued on any contract, made by her during her marriage. The action must be commenced either by or against her husband. It is only when an action is brought on a contract made by her before her marriage, that she is to be joined as a co-plaintiff, or defendant, with her husband.