Child & Benton v. Allen

33 Vt. 476 | Vt. | 1860

Barrett, J.

Earl sold, by conditional sale, an old wagon, to McIntyre reserving title to himself till Mclntire should pay for it. Mclntire took it into his possession and use, and made extensive repairs upon it.

It is expressly found, as matter of fact, that the wagon retained its identity, though much improved by the accessory repairs. In its improved condition it was sold or turned out by Mclntire to the present plaintiffs, at a stipulated price, to go in payment upon a subsisting indebtedness of Mclntire to them, and, as the court find, it was sufficiently taken into their possession to answer the requirement of the law as to a change of possession. Very soon after this transaction the defendant took the wagon by direction of Earl, upon a writ in his favor against Mclntire, and sold the same upon execution issued upon a judgment recovered by Earl in pursuance of said attachment, Mclntire not having paid Earl for the wagon according to the terms of the sale of it to him.

This suit is brought against Allen for taking the wagon in the manner above stated.

This being an action of trespass, of course the plaintiffs must, in the first instance, stand upon such title as would give them the right to retain and hold the wagon as against the defendant, as the agent and servant of Earl. And such title is put in issue by the plea of not guilty.

It is now too late to call in question the' right of a vendor by conditional sale to assert his title to the property. The adjudications in this State are numerous and familiar. A purchaser from the conditional vendee acquires no rights against the original owner by virtue of such a purchase, and even may become a trespasser in the eye of the law by making sucli a purchase, and taking possession of the property under it.

. The identity of the wagon having been established by the finding of the county court, of course Earl’s title to it, in its repaired *479condition, continued to the extent of its constituting to him valid security, and except in the case of attachment by some creditor of Mclntire, and a tender of the amount of Earl’s claim upon it, the latter’s title could not be affected or called in question by any body.

While the condition of the sale remained unperformed, it was his right, upon breach of such condition by Mclntire, to take possession of the property, and nobody but an attaching creditor, who had tendered the amount of his claim, could, in any way interfere.

Now it appears in the case, that, at the time of the attachment by the defendant, Mclntire owed Earl, not only for the wagon, but a considerable sum more, as the balance of current accounts between them. It could make no difference with any body else by what means Earl asserted his right to the wagon, whether by taking possession of it directly by his own hand, or through the forms of an attachment.

The fact that he adopted the form of an attachment is no ground for complaint by the plaintiffs, for all the fight they acquired was in virtue of a transaction that had been completed before the attachment was made, and that has been shown to be no right at all as against Earl. So nothing iu the nature of an estoppel can be claimed; for as suggested in the argument, it was Earl’s right to attach his own property if he saw fit, provided he did it without any design to defraud, and without effecting any fraud upon the rights of others.

The idea of a retroactive estoppel is certainly new, and as we think, untenable. But there is a reason in this case, if reason were necessary, why Earl resorted to an attachment. By virtue of the terms of the s..le his right to the wagon would have been satisfied by a tender of the amount of his lien, by an attaching creditor, and perhaps by an assignee. But until such tender, his possessory right continued perfect and absolute. As against the effect of such a tender it may have been and probably was desirable to him to fasten upon the property, for its entire value, not only in virtue of his lien for the original price of its purchase, but also as a means of turning it to account upon his debt against Mclntire outside of the purchase money due for the wagon,

*480As to what was urged by the plaintiffs on the score of the notice of special matter of defence, two remarks will suffice.

1st. No such justification was necessary, as it did not stand upon the ground of a license. The defendant was standing upon the right of Earl, acting as his agent and servant, and of course could successfully stand upon the right of Earl to put the plaintiffs upon establishing their title under the general issue,

The defence of license, requiring a special plea, arises only when such license was given by the plaintiff himself; and not when the defendant stands in the shoes of one claiming title as against the plaintiff.

2d. What is claimed in this case as estoppel in the pleadings, can be so regarded, only as they constitute admissions, which dispense with proof of the facts admitted, But the general issue was pleaded, and this put in issue the plaintiffs’ title, and enforced him to sustain it by proof, before any special defence became necessary.

Unless the defendant could stand upon this issue, he could not stand at all; for, if the plaintiffs made out their title, it was conclusive against the defendant; it being beyond question if the property belonged to the plaintiffs, the process in favor of Earl would be no protection to the defendant for taking the property. In the relation he sustained to Earl, in no event could he have been a trespasser against the plaintiffs, unless Earl would have been, if he personally had taken possession of the property on the strength of his title to it.

It is always competent for a defendant, in trespass, to put the plaintiff on proof of his title under the general issue, however many special defences he may set forth on the record ; and the special pleas have no effect by way of estoppel in relation to any facts averred dr admitted in them, as to the rights of the parties in the trial of the case, unless the issues upon such special pleas shall become subjects of litigation in the trial; and then they estop only as admissions that operate to preclude proof in contradiction of the averment, or to dispense with proof of what is admitted by the pleadings. ■ They in no manner in the particular case operate as estoppels m pais, and outside of the purposes of the particular issue taken upon such pleas themselves ; and least *481of all can they he regarded in the light of operating as an estoppel by having unwarrantably misled the other party, as has been claimed for them in this case.

These views are so much matters of common learning in the law, that it has not been deemed important to recur to the books, or to comment on those cited in the argument.

The judgment is affirmed.