62 N.H. 394 | N.H. | 1882
To maintain an action for goods bargained and sold, the contract of sale must be so far completed as to vest the title in the buyer. As between the parties, delivery is not essential to a completed sale, except when required by the statute of frauds. As a general rule, under a contract of sale of specific chattels at a stipulated price, when nothing remains to be done to designate the property sold or the price to be paid, the title, independently of the statute of frauds, immediately vests in the buyer, and a right to the price in the seller, unless it can be shown that such was not the intention of the parties. Clark v. Draper,
A sale of chattels may be conditional. The payment of the price may be made a condition precedent to the transfer of the title, and in such a case the property will not pass although the goods are delivered. A sale for cash is not necessarily a conditional sale. Scudder v. Bradbury,
In the present case the sale was by auction and the terms were "cash down." When the auctioneer's hammer fell nothing remained to be done to designate the property sold or to put it in condition for delivery, and the title passed immediately to the defendant unless the parties intended otherwise. The question of intention is one of fact, which the referee has determined by his general finding in favor of the plaintiff. If a formal offer to deliver the goods would ordinarily be required before an action for the price could be maintained, the absolute refusal of the defendant to pay rendered an offer unnecessary in this case (Haines v. Tucker,
Case discharged.
STANLEY, J., did not sit: the others concurred. *397