86 Vt. 453 | Vt. | 1913
This is an action of trover. The case was heard by the court and on facts found judgment was rendered for the plaintiffs and a certified execution was awarded. The defendant excepted.
The Allen Lumber Company is a partnership engaged in the lumber business. In July, 1910, the defendant purchased of the plaintiffs some lumber. He asked for credit but that was denied on the ground that as he was a stranger to the plaintiffs the sale, if made, must be a cash transaction. The defendant told the partner with whom the business was done that if the latter would send the lumber to a place in Montpelier where the defendant was building a house he would pay cash. The plaintiffs sent the lumber and it was paid for as agreed. Later a second sale of lumber was consummated between the parties.
Some days afterwards the defendant came to one of the plaintiff firm and asked for a third bill of lumber and that it be sold him on credit. But the plaintiff firm again refused credit and said the sale must be a cash transaction, whereupon the defendant said he had the money at the house and that he would pay cash the same as before when the lumber was received at the house. The lumber was sent but the defendant did not pay for it. In a few days the partner with whom the business had been done on the part of the firm called on the defendant about' the matter and the defendant said his boy was not there but that he would send the money as soon as the boy came. The defendant did not send it and the partner, referred to, called again when the defendant said the order was not complete, that there were some balusters which he had not received. The plaintiffs furnished the balusters and the defendant said he expected some money soon and would pay. The plaintiffs told him they must have the money or the lumber. Again in a few days they told him the same thing. The defendant proceeded to use the lumber in building his house and did not pay and never has paid for the lumber in question. The court below found and held that the lumber did not become the property of the defendant, that he had no right to use the same and that by using it as he did he converted it to his own use and become liable in this action for the value of the lumber which was found to be $221.97.
These facts were found by the court, reduced to writing and signed by the judges as the statute requires, and the exceptions recite that thereon the court adjudged the defendant guilty
This exception does not raise the question of the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain any particular finding. Langdon v. Hunt, 82 Vt. 322, 73 Atl. 865.
The defendant does not claim that it does, but on various grounds claims that the findings are insufficient to sustain the judgment.
It is claimed and argued that a demand and refusal were essential to establish a conversion and that a demand for the lumber or the money was not a sufficient demand. But here a demand was not necessary, for the findings recite that the defendant had used up the lumber, and a demand is not required when it would necessarily be futile where there is no power to restore, when there has been actual conversion. Chitty, Pl. 170; Crompton v. Valido Marble Co., 60 Vt. 291, 302, 303, 15 Atl. 153, 1 L. E. A. 120; Merrill v. Bullard, 59 Vt. 389, 8 Atl. 157; Tinker v. Morrill, 39 Vt. 477, 480, 94 Am. Dec. 345.
This is upon the principle that the law never requires the performance of a vain or useless act. The transaction in question was a sale for cash on delivery, and the title with the right "of immediate possession remained in the plaintiffs unless they had waived their right to treat the sale as a cash transaction. Turner v. Moore, 58 Vt. 455, 3 Atl. 467; Drake v. Scott, 136 Ala. 261, 33 So. 873, 96 Am. St. Rep. 25; Tyler v. Freeman, 3 Cush. 261; Howard v. Haas, 131 Mo. App. 499, 109 S. W. 1076; Paulson v. Lyon, 26 Utah 438, 73 Pac. 510; Berlaiwsky v. Rosenthal, 104 Me. 62, 71 Atl. 69; Dudley v. Sawyer, 41 N. H. 326; Hammett v. Linneman, 48 N. Y. 399; Benj. Sales (7th ed.) 270, 271, 298, 299; 2 Kent’s Comm. 496, 497.
In the case of a sale for cash on delivery, the delivery and payment are, in contemplation of law, concurrent, and the doctrine that without payment the property will not pass even though it be actually delivered into the hands of the buyer is very generally recognized.
In Turner v. Moore, 58 Vt. 455, 3 Atl. 467, there was a cash sale of a tombstone which the testimony tended to show was delivered at a cemetery where it remained for two or three days, and that then the seller had some conversation with the purchaser during which he asked for a lien on the stone which was refused.
If there was a waiver here by the plaintiffs the sale became a sale on credit and title passed to the defendant. But a waiver involves both knowledge and intent. Webster v. State Mutual Fire Ins. Co., 81 Vt. 75, 69 Atl. 319, and here it cannot be said as matter of law that there was an actual.consent on the plaintiffs ’ part to give credit nor, in the circumstances, that the plaintiffs ’ conduct was such that the intent necessary to a waiver must be attributed to them.
In discussing the question of waiver the defendant makes free reference to the transcript. The finding of facts says: ‘‘The entire transcript of the case is hereby referred to and made.a part hereof for any proper purpose in connection with the finding of facts.” This, reference gave the defendant an opportunity by a proper exception to question the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain any of the findings, or to raise the claim that a finding should have been made which was not made, but he did neither of these things and the reference to the transcript goes for nothing, for the case was tried by the court under P. S. 1.982, and must be considered upon the facts found and reduced to writing by a majority of the members of the trial court and upon “no other or different facts.”. So we are confined to the finding of facts; and the demand for the money or the lumber did not, in law,, amount to acquiescence or waiver or the giving of credit, for it asserted the plaintiffs’ right and title to the lumber, ■ which the defendant does not appear then to have dis
For authority in this jurisdiction the defendant relies principally upon Eddy & Co. v. Field, 85 Vt. 108, 81 Atl. 249, and Andrews v. Carl, 77 Vt. 172, 59 Atl. 167. But neither of these cases supports his position. The sound doctrine adverse thereto is fully recognized in both eases.
In Eddy & Co. v. Field, the defendant was under obligation to return empty soda bottles to the plaintiffs, and he having had the bottles in question freighted and way-billed to the plaintiffs it was held that they could not maintain trover for the bottles upon a mere showing that they had not actually received them when suit was brought.
Andrews v. Carl, was a ease of trover for a cow. When the cow was a calf it strayed from its owner and was taken up by the defendant. He inquired of several if they had lost a calf •but he did not do the posting and advertising required of him by the statute. The calf grew up on his farm and he had the use of the cow. But the case as presented did not involve a consideration of his use, or claim of ownership, but the question was whether his mere failure to post and advertise as he should have done constituted in itself a conversion such that the Statute of Limitations began to run from the time of such failure. The reasoning of the case makes strongly against the contention of the defendant here.
The defendant refers to Lumbra v. Campbell, 84 Vt. 51, 78 Atl. 120, in support of his position. That case was trover for a clapboard saw mill which was leased for one season. When that season was closed the mill was stored by the defendant in accordance with an agreement of the parties, and during the second season the defendant set it up and used it until it was destroyed by fire without his fault. Then the lessor undertook to hold the lessee liable in trover for the value of the mill, but the court rendered judgment for the lessee, and in support of the judgment this Court held that the court below could fairly have
The defendant suggests that the finding of facts is deficient in that it does not appear clearly how long a time elapsed between the several occurrences mentioned therein. But the finding of facts is not a pleading and there is no substantial insufficiency in the respect mentioned.
The defendant says, too, that there is a shortage in . the finding of facts in that there is no finding “as to the plaintiffs’ understanding as to when they were to receive their pay. ’ ’ But the findings show that the plaintiffs refused credit and insisted that if there was a sale the transaction must be a cash one and that the defendant agreed to pay cash on delivery.
This states the contract and a contract is a meeting of minds and expresses the understanding and expectations of the parties, and the law of contract is as Sir Frederick Pollock has declared an endeavor “to establish a positive sanction for the expectation of good faith which had grown up in the mutual dealings of men of average right mindness.” Pollock, Principles of Contract, 1, 8th London Ed., 1911.
The defendant makes no claim that if the judgment was proper the court was not warranted in granting the motion for a certified execution.
Judgment affirmed.