Veterinary notes for horse owners : a manual of horse medicine and surgery . of the lossof an eye, or any other blemish or defect ^dsible to a commonobserver. We, therefore, think that, by the terms of their writtenwarranty, the parties meant that there was not at that time, asplint which would be the cause of future lameness, and that thejury have found that it was. ^We therefore think that the warranty was broken. In Smith v. OBryan (The Law Times, vol. ii., New Series,p. 346) the horse which was warranted sound, had a splint, that,at the time of sale, did not cause lameness. The fact of the


Veterinary notes for horse owners : a manual of horse medicine and surgery . of the lossof an eye, or any other blemish or defect ^dsible to a commonobserver. We, therefore, think that, by the terms of their writtenwarranty, the parties meant that there was not at that time, asplint which would be the cause of future lameness, and that thejury have found that it was. ^We therefore think that the warranty was broken. In Smith v. OBryan (The Law Times, vol. ii., New Series,p. 346) the horse which was warranted sound, had a splint, that,at the time of sale, did not cause lameness. The fact of the animalsubsequently becoming lame, on account of this splint, was heldto be a breach of warranty. JARDE. 245 Enlargement of the Splint Bones. As a result of inflammation, we may meet with the two follow-ing forms of enlargement of the splint bones, without countingalterations in the size of these bones under the familiar forms ofsplint and spavin : — 1. Enlargement of the head of the outer splint bone of a hindley (Figs. 84 and 85). Though this disease is well known to.


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