179 Ind. 576 | Ind. | 1913
Action in replevin. The only error assigned arises on the sustaining of appellees’ demurrer to the complaint. Appellant alleges in his complaint that on May 28, 1906, he conditionally sold and delivered to appellee, John C. Murray, and one Edwards a retail stock of drugs and other property; located in' a certain business room in Connersville, Indiana.
The contract of sale was in writing, and is as follows:
“This indenture witnesseth, that David W. Andre, of the city of Connersville, in the county of Fayette, in the state of Indiana, has this 28th day of May, 1906, for the sum the of two thousand ($2,000) Dollars, and full compliance with the terms and conditions hereof, sold and transferred to John G. Murray and J. Arthur Edwards, of said city, county and state, the following described personal property and chattels, located in said city, county, and state, and described as follows, towit: All the vendor’s stock of retail drugs, sundries, paints, oils, liquors, the same to include all retail stock on hand of vendor of every description, now located in what is known as the Opera House Drug Store Room, at No. 128 W. Fifth Street, in said city; also seven show cases, two pair of scales, and one prescription scale, located in said room. The terms and conditions above mentioned are, that said vendee shall pay to said vendor the sum of Two Thousand ($2,000) Dollars, with interest thereon at the rate of six (6) per cent per annum from date hereof until paid, said sum and Interest thereon to be payable in monthly installments of not less than Twenty ($20.00) Dollars each, the same Jo be applied first to the payment of interest and the balance to said principal, the first installment coming due at the expiration of one month from the date hereof, and one installment at the expiration of each month thereafter, until the whole amount of principal and interest is paid. The*578 retail stock shall remain, where the same is now located, until said sum, together with all interest thereon, is paid in full, and until said principal sum and interest is paid, said vendee shall keep said stock renewed and replenished so that same shall at all times he maintained at not less than the cash value at wholesale in amount equal to the unpaid balance of said sum and interest, and said stock so added to stand hereunder in place of stock sold. That vendee shall pay to vendors as rent for said room where said retail stock is now located the sum of $8.25 each week until said principal of $2,000 and interest is paid, the first weekly payments thereof coming due one week from date hereof, and one payment of $8.25 coming due each week thereafter until said principal and interest is paid as above provided.”
It is also averred in the complaint that by the mutual mistake of each of the parties to the contract, and by the mistake of the scrivener who drafted the same, the provision "that the title to all of said property shall be and remain in the said vendor until full payment of said purchase price, and that upon default of said vendee in any of the conditions that said vendor shall be entitled to the possession thereof” was omitted from said agreement, as reduced to writing; that subsequently Edwards sold and assigned his interest in the property to Murray, who assumed the obligations of the original contract of purchase. It is further averred that on July 28, 1908, Murray and Edwards made default, in that they failed and refused to pay the monthly installment of principal and interest then due, and informed the appellant that they would pay no further amounts upon said contract, and that on said date there was a balance of said purchase price and interest unpaid in the sum of $1727.50; that on said day, the vendees made further default, in that they had failed to keep said stock renewed, as provided, but had sold and reduced the same, so that said stock did not exceed $1,000 wholesale value, including renewal goods, and that the value of the original goods remaining did not exceed $200; that on said day appellant Murray, assuming to own said property, assigned
In the case of Winchester, etc., Co. v. Carman (1887), 109 Ind. 31, 58 Am. Rep. 382, the facts shown, were that the vendee had sold the wagons in question in due course of trade and at retail. In the case of Steele v. Aspy (1891), 128 Ind. 367, 27 N. E. 739, the vendor’s administrator undertook to have a receiver appointed to take charge of a stock of goods sold to Steele by one Nelson, deceased. That case is not in point here for the reason that there was no condition in said contract that the ownership of the goods should be retained by the vendor until payment should be made therefore. The only condition being that the goods should not be removed from the town of Geneva where located; a thing he was not attempting to do. It is well settled by the authorities in this and other states that goods sold, where title is retained in the vendor, with the privilege to the vendee to sell the same at retail, does not authorize
In the ease of Hench v. Eacock, supra, the same question was involved as is presented in this cause, and it was held that while the contract would permit a sale of the goods in question, at retail, it did not warrant a sale in bulk, and that the original vendor might retake the goods from a mortgagee of the vendee. In the case of McGirr v. Sell, supra, that being an action in replevin to recover two barrels of whiskey, sold by appellee to one McCoy, on a contract, conditioned that the title should not pass until payment should be made in full, and which goods were levied on and offered for sale to satisfy an execution in the hands of a constable, which execution was issued upon a judgment in favor of other creditors than appellee. "Worden, J., in that ease on page 257, uses this language: “If the plaintiff had authorized McCoy to sell the whisky at wholesale, that would have ended the question; * * * but his authority to McCoy to retail in his own name did not necessarily carry the inference that the title to the liquors was in the latter. This was the purpose for which the liquors were placed in his possession, and was consistent with the plaintiff’s ownership of the property.”
In the ease of Burbank v. Crooker, supra, involving a sale of a stock of goods, in bulk, in a country store, bought
It appears from the averments of the complaint that at
Judgment reversed.
Note.—Reported in 101 N. E. 81. See, also, under (1) 31 Cyc. 333; (2) 35 Cyc. 670; (3) 35 Cyc. 677. As to when, under contracts of sale of personal property, the title passes to the buyer, see 138 Am. St. 903. As to- how, under a sale of personal property for cash, or cash on delivery, title stands when the seller parts with the possession without actually receiving the price, see 120 Am. St. 868. As to a sale conditioned for retention of title by seller until payment, see 58 Am. Rep. 386. As to the right of a vendor under conditional sale as affected by bankruptcy of purchaser, see 38 L. R. A. (N. S.) 554.