144 Mass. 350 | Mass. | 1887
This is an action of replevin of a machine, which it was admitted formerly belonged to the plaintiff, and was delivered by it to one Morrill. The defendant, the assignee in insolvency of Morrill, contends that the machine was delivered on an absolute sale to Morrill under an order sent to the plaintiff’s salesroom on July 6, 1885. The delivery was on July 17. The plaintiff contends that the delivery was under an order by which the machine was to remain the property of the plaintiff until paid for, received from Morrill at his place of business, on July 13, by one Robbins, an agent of the plaintiff to solicit orders, and communicated by him the next day to one Knight, the president of the plaintiff corporation, who had authority to accept orders and make sales.
The exception to the admission of testimony by Knight that he determined whether the orders solicited by Robbins should be accepted or not, has not been pressed, and is clearly untenable.
The testimony of Knight and of Robbins as to the communication of Morrill's offer of July 13 by Robbins to Knight was admitted, not, as seems to be supposed by the defendant, as evidence of what the order given by Morrill was, but as evidence that the machine was delivered under that order.
The evidence being conflicting whether the plaintiff delivered the machine on an absolute sale on four months’ credit under the order of July 6, or on a conditional sale under the order of July 13, it was competent for the plaintiff to prove that Morrill’s reputation for financial ability was poor. It had some tendency to show that it was probable that credit was not given to Morrill.
If the plaintiff had both offers before it, and accepted one of them, the fact that Morrill was notoriously in bad pecuniary