119 Va. 26 | Va. | 1916
delivered the opinion of the court.
In an action of detinue appellee recovered against the appellants, on a demurrer to the defendant’s evidence, the judgment under review for the Baker electric automobile, specifically described in the declaration.
The following is a summary of the material facts from the standpoint of a demurrer to the evidence: Appellee, hereinafter called the Baker Company, is a corporation of Cleveland, Ohio, engaged in the manufacture and sale of automobiles. Desiring to introduce its cars in the city of Richmond, in the year 1910, it formed a business connection with the Worth Auto Sales Company (later known as Worth Electric Vehicle Company), styled herein the Worth Company, by which the latter company was given the exclusive right to sell Baker machines in - Richmond, and only dealt in those machines. The Worth Company advertised the Baker electrics in the daily city papers, and the windows of its salesroom displayed signs that it was agent for those machines, and it was known to the trade in Richmond as general agent for the sale of
In October, 1912, the Worth Company sent in an order from O. D. Pitts for a Baker electric, of the description and price of the car in controversy, which order likewise included two other cars. The order recites the payment of one thousand dollars, five hundred dollars paid in money, and five hundred represented the amount allowed for a station wagon taken in exchange for the Pitts car. Upon that order two machines were shipped on February 13, 1913, and the bills of lading forwarded through the Broad Street Bank with instructions to deliver the machines upon payment of a draft on the Worth Company for $2,800, and the signing of a contract covering two cars, one of which was the Pitts car in litigation. The contract ignores the payment made by Pitts and recites that the cars are to be held as the property of the Baker Company. The- dealer’s price named for the machine in controversy was $2,020, while that named in Pitts’ order is $2,700, the difference, $680, being the compen
At the date of the entry of the $1,200 advertising credit, the books of the Times-Dispatch showed an indebtedness, as of January 1, 1913, by the Worth Company to it of $460.35 for prior advertising, with which amount the $1,200 was credited. Upon that circumstance the Baker Company grounds its contention, and the case depends upon its ability to establish
It follows from what has been said that the Times-Dispatch was within its rights in applying as a credit on the $1,200 item the pre-existing indebtedness of the Worth Company to the extent of $680, the amount of its share of the fund. In so doing it was not paying the agent’s debt with the principal’s goods, but lawfully was applying the agent’s money to the payment of its debt. The transaction was in no way prejudicial to the rights of the principal.
That was done in this cáse. The Pitts machine was appropriated by the Baker Company to the contract, and accepted by the assignee of the Times-Dispateh, which satisfied the requirement of Rule 23.
Having reached the conclusion that the Baker Company was divested of its title to the Pitts machine by the sale to the Times-Dispateh, and the transfer to Mrs. Asher, the subsequent misconduct and bankruptcy of the Worth Company is immaterial. The Baker Company having parted with the legal title and never having acquired it again, could in no aspect of the case maintain detinue to recover the machine.
For these reasons the judgment must be reversed, the demurrer to the defendants’ evidence overruled, and judgment entered for the appellants upon the verdict provisionally found by the jury.
Reversed.