135 Mass. 172 | Mass. | 1883
By the terms of the written agreement, the plaintiff was bound at all events to pay to the defendants the full amount at which the goods were valued, and upon such payment the title was to vest in him. This payment, therefore, constitutes the agreed price of the goods, and it is a misnomer to call it rent. The defendants would have no right to exact payment in full of the money, and also to reclaim the goods. When the plaintiff discontinued his payments on account, what was the legal position of the defendants ? If it be assumed that they might, at their option, either reclaim the goods as their own property, without any obligation to account for their proceeds or value to the plaintiff, or that they might collect the price in full, it is plain that they were not entitled to do both. They could not treat the transaction as a valid sale and an invalid one at the same time. If they reclaimed their property, it must be on the ground that they elected to treat the transaction as no sale. If they brought an action for the price, they would thereby affirm it as a sale. Two inconsistent courses being open to them, they must elect which they would pursue; and, electing one, they are debarred from the other. Reclaiming the goods would show an election to forego the right to recover the price. But, instead of reclaiming the goods in the first instance, they brought an action against Bailey for the price, made an attachment of his property by trustee process, entered their action in court, and he was defaulted. They were thereupon entitled to judgment.against him. Under this state of things, the action was continued to a later term of court, and after the lapse of several months, and after the commencement of the second subsequent term of court, the defendants, without discontinuing their action, or giving any notice to Bailey of an intention to abandon that remedy, took possession of the goods; and, after this had been done, they proceeded in their action to judgment, and took out execution, upon which they collected a small sum from the trustee. They had thus made a decisive election to treat the transaction as a sale, before reclaiming "the goods; and, under such an election, the title passed to Bailey. Butler v. Hildreth, 5 Met. 49. Arnold v. Richmond Iron Works, 1 Gray, 434, 440. Heryford v. Davis, 102 U. S. 235, 246.
For these reasons, a majority of the court is of opinion that there must be Judgment for the plaintiff.