175 P. 613 | Or. | 1918
1. The plaintiff’s brother acted as his agent and went to the home of the defendant to buy some cattle. He looked over one band the defendant had at what was called the Magee place, and some others at his home place, and without closing the deal at that time left the place and went to look at some more of the defendant’s cattle on Mary’s River. When asked what occurred after he returned, he answered:
“I just rode back to the place and he [referring to the defendant] walked out of the stable door just as I came along, with a pitchfork in his hand, and I says, ‘Sheedy, I wouldn’t have a hoof of those cattle on the river.’ I says, ‘We will just be confined to the cattle right here on the ground.’ I says, ‘I can just take forty head of those cows, seventeen out of the cattle at the Magee place and the other twenty-three out of this bunch. ’ He says, ‘All right, you can have them cattle.’ Just that way.”
Speaking about his previous examination of the cattle, he said:
“I walked through amongst them and I says, ‘I will' take this cow and that cow and that cow,’ just pointing them out to him.”
He said also that he was to give the defendant $50 a head for the cows and $30 each for the yearlings. He was to take the yearlings as they stood. Asked what arrangements he ma,de with Sheedy about taking care of the cattle, he said:
“Those cattle were to be taken the same care of, and fed just the same and at the same places, put in the shed, those calves or yearlings, until the next Monday, the fifth, I think it was the fifth, anyway it was Monday. I was to go and receive those cattle right there and pay fbr them.”
“I offered him a thousand dollars and he said he didn’t want any money. He said Lee Brown had money enough to buy and sell us both, and I told him I had rather give him the money and then he would know what he had done, but he didn’t want it.”
The following also appears in his direct examination:
“Q. Mr. Brown, what did Mr. Sheedy say with reference to parting with title to the cattle?
“A. JTe said they were my cattle.
“Q. What did you say?
“A. I told him all right, and we set a day for me to come and take the cattle away, and I was there to take them away, too, with the money.”
This witness gave other evidence to the effect that on the following Monday he and the plaintiff went together to Sheedy’s farm, demanded the cattle and offered to pay for them, but defendant refused to take the money or deliver the cattle. Testimony also appears for the plaintiff respecting the value of the stock.
On cross-examination the witness testifies thus:
‘ ‘ Q. How long was it after you selected those cows before you bargained with him?
“A. I suppose it was about an hour.
“Q. Did you bargain?
“A. Yes. Just time for me to ride from Sheedy’s over to Marysville and back over to his place.
“Q. Then you told him you would be back a week from Monday and take the cattle and pay for them?
“A. Yes, sir.”
On redirect examination on this point, his testimony runs thus: ■
“Q. Clarke was asking you about the receipt of these cattle. When did you receive them?
*78 “A. The twenty-seventh of January, the day I was there.”
The testimony of the plaintiff himself refers simply to the occurrence of the following Monday when the defendant, as admitted by his answer, refused to deliver the cattle. The cattle were not segregated from the larger herds and were in no way disturbed in their usual custody.
The Oregon statute of frauds so far as applicable to the case at hand reads thus:
“In the following cases the agreement is void unless the same or some note or memorandum thereof, expressing the consideration, be in writing and subscribed by the party to be charged, or by his lawfully authorized agent; evidence, therefore, of the agreement shall not be received other than the writing, or secondary evidence of its contents, in the cases prescribed by law:— * * (5) An agreement for the sale of personal property at a price not less than $50, unless the buyer accept and receive some part of such personal property, or pay at the time some part of the purchase money.”
“When the facts in relation to a contract of sale alleged to be within the statute are not in dispute, it belongs to the court to determine their legal effect.”
The crux of the controversy is for the court to determine whether there was a delivery of the cattle by the defendant, for without delivery there can be neither
The rule is thus laid down by Mr. Justice Lord in Galvin v. MacKenzie, 21 Or. 184, 186 (27 Pac. 1039):
“To constitute an acceptance within the meaning of this provision, the purchaser must so deal with the property as to prove that he acknowledges the existence of the contract. There must be some act on his part plainly recognizing the existence of the contract and that the property has been received in accordance therewith. The property must be completely transferred, which includes both delivery by the vendor and acceptance by the vendee. There must be delivery of the goods by the vendor with an intention of vesting the right of possession in the vendee, and there must he an .actual receiving and acceptance by the latter with the intention of taking possession as owner.”
Again, says Mr. Chief Justice Bean, in Reynolds v. Scriber, 41 Or. 407, 410 (69 Pac. 48):
“To constitute a part performance, however, within the meaning of this rule, the acts relied upon for that purpose must have reference to the contract, and clearly appear to have been done solely with a view to its performance. Acts merely preliminary or ancillary to the agreement, such as delivering an abstract of title, giving directions for a conveyance, the preparation of the agreement, maldng valuations, and other like acts, are not sufficient. Whatever was done must have been done under the contract, and in part performance of its terms, and should tend to show not only that there had been an agreement, but throw some light upon its nature, so that neither the fact of the contract nor its execution rests solely upon parol evidence.”
The principle is thus stated in Beedy v. Brayman Co., 108 Me. 200 (79 Atl. 721, Ann. Cas. 1913B, 273, 36 L. R. A. (N. S.) 76):
‘ ‘ There may be a complete delivery at common law without either receipt or acceptance under the statute.*80 The former is the act of the vendor; while receipt, which affects the possession, and acceptance, which affects the title, are the acts of the purchaser, and both receipt and acceptance are essential. Nor can such receipt and acceptance be shown by words alone, where such words are part of the alleged oral bargain and sale. But receipt and acceptance need not be contemporaneous with the alleged contract, if made in pursuance of it; nor need they be simultaneous. The former may precede or follow the latter. No act of the vendor alone can be effective to make delivery, without receipt and acceptance, and take the case out .of the statute. If the vendee does any act- to the goods, of wrong if he be not their owner, and of right, if he be their owner, the doing of the act is evidence that he had accepted them. ’ ’
In Wilson v. Hotchkiss, 21 Cal. App. 392 (132 Pac. 88, 93), the judgment of the trial court was reversed for its refusal to give the following instructions:
“Mere words are not sufficient to prove a receipt or-acceptance of the personal property to take an oral contract of the sale of personal property for a price exceeding $200 out of the statute of frauds. The acts of the parties proved must be of such a character as to unequivocally place the property within the power and under the exclusive dominion of the buyer.
“To satisfy the statute of frauds there must' be a delivery by the seller, with an intention of vesting the right of possession in the buyer, and there must be an actual acceptance or receipt by the buyer, with the intention of taking possession as owner. This rule can only be satisfied by something done subsequent to the sale unequivocally indicating the mutual intention of the parties. ’ ’
In Devine v. Warner, 75 Conn. 375 (53 Atl. 782, 96 Am. St. Rep. 211, 228), a paragraph of the syllabus reads thus:
“An acceptance of goods, sold under an oral contract of sale, to satisfy the statute of frauds requires*81 more, by way of proof of receipt and acceptance, than mere words, indicative merely of the parties’ assent to the agreement of sale, and it is not enough to satisfy the condition of acceptance that the title to the goods has merely become vested in the purchaser.”
The annotator to the opinion in the American State Reports appends this matter:
“There must always be an unconditional acceptance of the goods purchased by the buyer under a verbal contract of sale in order to satisfy the requirements of the statute of frauds. In other words, to constitute a sufficient delivery under an oral agreement for the sale of personal property, the property must be placed within the control, and under the exclusive dominion of the buyer: Marsh v. Rouse, 44 N. Y. 643. The acceptance and receipt of merchandise under an oral contract of sale sufficient to satisfy such statute, must be such a transfer of the physical possession of the property as places the goods beyond the control of the vendor and within the control of the vendee. Such transfer is not accomplished, where, under such contract, the goods are left in the possession and control of the vendor, pending the taking of an inventory by him to determine the price to be paid for the goods: Brunswick Grocery Co. v. Lamar, 116 Ga. 1 [42 S. E. 366]. To make a verbal sale of chattels valid under the statute of frauds delivery must be made, the vendee must take actual possession, that possession must be open and unequivocal, carrying with it the usual marks and indications of ownership by the vendee. It must be continuous, not taken to be surrendered back, not formal but substantial. * * To constitute a delivery and acceptance of goods, such as the statute of frauds requires under a verbal contract of sale, something more than mere words is necessary. Superadded to the language of the contract and the declarations of the parties there must be some act of theirs amounting to a transfer of the possession and an acceptance thereof by the buyer and the case of cumbrous articles is not an exception to this rule*82 (citing authorities). Mere words alone, unaccompanied by acts, cannot make out a delivery and acceptance of goods, because a delivery of goods to take a contract of sale out of the statute of frauds, must be of such a nature that the property 'is placed under the control and power of the vendee, and the acts, to change the possession of the property from the vendor to the vendee, must be such as to deprive the vendor of his right of lien as security for the payment of the purchase money.”
In addition to the precedents noted in his brief, counsel for the plaintiff pressed upon our attention at the hearing the case of Smith & Son v. Bloom, 159 Iowa, 592 (141 N. W. 32), as- authority sustaining his contention. There the plaintiff sought to recover damages for breach of a parol contract for the sale of some sheep, and the defense was based on the statute of frauds. Premising that the Iowa statute forbids oral testimony only when “no part of the property is delivered,” we note that the facts there involved were, substantially that the sheep were in the possession of the plaintiffs in a pen assigned to their use in the Union Stockyards at South Omaha when the defendant applied to them to buy the animals. At his request and in his presence they were taken out of that, pen to the stockyard scales where the defendant gave his name to the weighmaster as purchaser. They were weighed by the servant of the Stockyards Company over whom the plaintiffs had no authority, and then with the assent of the defendant they were driven into another pen entirely out of the control of the plaintiffs and subject to the order of the defendant. _ The essence of the decision is that all this was sufficient to take the case to the jury in satisfaction of the Iowa statute requiring delivery only without reference to receipt or acceptance. It will be observed also that
The terms of the statute are cogent in declaring that the agreement is void unless it is in writing, properly • subscribed. This is the rule. The exception is found in the language, “unless the buyer accept and receive some part of the personal property, or pay at the time some part of the purchase money.” As a condition precedent to being allowed to prove his case by oral testimony it was required of the plaintiff that he establish the performance of a corporeal act which, inde