47 Barb. 646 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1866
There is a very striking incongruity both in the finding of the facts by the referee and the statement of them in the case presented in this action. . It arises upon the statement that the plaintiffs sold and delivered the oxen in controversy to William France, and that it was also agreed between them' that the oxen should remain the plaintiffs’ property until they were paid for. If they were sold and delivered, the title to them passed to the purchaser. But if the plaintiffs agreed to sell them only when the purchase price was paid, the title in the meantime remaining in them, the vendee took no title whatever, but merely a right to acquire it in future, when he paid the purchase money. (Herring v. Hoppock, 15 N. Y. Rep. 409. Hasbrouch v. Lounsbury, 20 N. Y. Rep. 598. Bigelow v. Huntley, 8 Verm. R. 151. Smith v. Foster, 18 id. 182.) The latter view of the transaction is the one which the referee probably intended to adopt, for it is the only one which has any color of consistency with the final disposition he made of the case.
Whether they can recover the property from the defendant, who was a bona fide purchaser under their vendee, with such a contract established in their favor, presents the real point in controversy in this case, and concerning that, considerable diversity of opinion exists in courts of justice. But most of the cases in which opinions have been produced adverse to the right of the plaintiffs to recover the property in dispute from the defendant, arose under contracts for completed or actual sales, and in them it was very properly held that a bona fide. purchaser from the vendee in possession secured a title which was superior to the rights of the vendor under his lien for the unpaid purchase price; for the contracts proved contemplated present actual sales at the time they were made, by force of which the title to the articles affected passed at once to the vendees. From the time those contracts were completed, or the bargains were struck, the property became subject to the risk of the buyers, and if it were afterwards accidentally destroyed, the loss would fall upon them, and they would still remain liable for the price. The only interest
But the present controversy does not arise out of a sale of personal property, and it is not, therefore, governed by the law of sales, or the doctrine of the cases already cited. There is a very marked and clear distinction between it and a completed sale. F'or here, instead of the title to the property-passing to the vendee, it remained in the vendors. All that the vendee acquired by the contract was the possession, and
The only cases opposed to this view of the law are those of Steelyards v. Singer, (2 Hilton, 96,) and Wait v. Green, (35 Barb. 585,) which seem to proceed upon the authority of the cases arising upon actual sales, where the vendee was entrusted with the possession, upon the condition that the vendor’s lien for the purchase price should not be waived by the delivery. Those cases do not warrant the conclusions predicated upon them by the learned judges who delivered the opinions in Steelyards v. Singer, and Wait v. Green, on account of the distinction existing between the contracts on which they were pronounced, and the contracts before the courts where these decisions were made. In view of the great weight of authority against them, they can not be regarded as accurate expositions of law upon the subject now under consideration. On the contrary, the settled current and analogies of the law are against the right of the defendant to withhold the property in suit from the plaintiffs, who are the real owners of it. And the judgment should be affirmed.
Grover, Marvin and Daniels, Justices.]