52 Me. 578 | Me. | 1864
The opinion of the Court was drawn by
It is not questioned that the sale by the plaintiff to one Chatterly, under whom the defendant derives his title, was made on condition. The cattle sold were to remain the property of the plaintiff " until paid for.” No payment having been made within the time in which, by the agreement of parties, it was to have been made, no title vested in Chatterly. It was his fault or neglect that it did not so vest.
A sale and delivery of goods on condition that the title shall not vest in the vendee until payment of the price, passes no title until the condition is performed; and the vender, if guilty of no laches, may reclaim the property, even from one who has purchased from his vendee. Coggel v. Hartford & N. H. R. R. Co., 3 Gray, 544. By the very terms of the contract, the entire payment of the purchase money is a condition precedent to the vesting of the title.
The measure • of damages in trover, is the value of the property converted at the time and place of conversion, with interest from that date. Brown, then, having never parted with his title, is entitled to recover the full value of his property. It is as much his as any property he may own. His rights are not impaired by an attempt on the part of some one to purchase on conditions, which have never been complied with. The measure of damage is the whole value of the property conditionally sold. Angier v. Taunton Paper Manuf. Co., 1 Gray, 621. When personal property is sold, upon condition that the title shall not vest in the vendee, unless he pay the price agreed upon by a specified time, the vendee has no attachable interest in the property or its increase, until performance of the condition. If, after the time for payment of the price has elapsed, the price not being paid, a creditor of the vendee attach the property, he cannot defeat the vendor’s right to sustain an action of trover against him for the property, by tendering him the amount which the vendee agreed to pay and the interest thereon. Buckmaster v. Smith, 22 Vt., 203. The plaintiff is entitled to recover the full value. Smith v. Foster, 18 Vt., 182.
If the plaintiff had resumed possession of the oxen for non-performance of the conditions of their sale, he would have been under no legal obligation to repay the sums received in part payment. The purchaser, failing to perform
The numerous cases to be found in the Eeports do not sustain the propositions which the defendant’s counsel seeks to establish. In Pierce v. Benjamin, 14 Pick., 357, Morton, J., says, "the general rule of damages in actions of trover is unquestionably the value of the property taleen, at the time of its conversion. But there are exceptions and qualifications of this rule, as plain and well established as the rule itself. Whenever the property is returned, and received by the plaintiff, the rule does not apply. And when the property itself has been sold and the proceeds applied to the payment of the plaintiff’s debt, or otherwise to his use, the reason of the rule ceases and justice forbids its application.” But the defendant, upon the principles of this decision, is liable for the value of the property converted, for his case is not within the exceptions or qualifications of the rule.
In Chamberlain v. Shaw, 18 Pick., 279, Shaw, C. J., remarks as follows : — "In an action of trover, though the plaintiff’s possession has been violated, he waives all claims to damages on account of that violation, and seeks an indemnity only for the loss of his property. Hence it is, that the value of the property at the time of conversion is prima facie the measure of damages. Now, if the case is so situated that the plaintiff can be indemnified by a sum of money less than the full value, there seems to be no reason why it should not be done, as where the plaintiff has a special property subject to which the defendant is entitled to the goods. For instance, a factor has a lien on goods to half their value. The principal becomes bankrupt and the property vests in his assignees, subject, of course, to all legal
In Fowler v. Gilman, 13 Met., 267, Shaw, C. J., says: "The true general rule of damages in trover is the value of the goods at the time of conversion, with interest. This rule applies when the plaintiff, is the general owner, or is answerable over to others. But when the plaintiff admits that the defendant has a lien on the property to a certain amount, that amount may be deducted by the jury, in assessing damages.” Plere the plaintiff is the general owner,' and, as such, is entitled to compensation. The defendant has no lien and never had, and cannot, within the principles of this case, claim any deduction.'
There was no conditional sale in Hyde v. Cookson, 21 Barb. 92. The plaintiff in that case had contracted with one Osborne to tan a quantity of hides for him on certain specified terms. Before the tanning was completed, Osborne failed and assigned his property, the hides included, to the defendant, against whom an action was brought for their conversion. The Court held that the proper measure of damages in such action was the value of the plaintiff’s interest in the hides, and not the enhanced value thereof when manufactured into leather. In other words, they allowed deduction for the labor and money expended by Osborne upon the hides, under his contract. The case, therefore, when examined, has no bearing upon the present discussion.
If a mortgagee of personal property, after a foreclosure, brings trover for the value of the property mortgaged, he recovers in damages its whole value. The mortgagee is never allowed to claim deductions for part payments. So
Exceptions■ overruled.