2 Colo. App. 89 | Colo. Ct. App. | 1892
delivered the opinion of the court.
In 1889, the Colorado Soap Company was a corporation manufacturing soap in the city of Denver. In the early part of that year Cook & Davis were grocers doing business in the town of Trinidad. Subsequently there were some changes in the personnel of that firm, and probably whatever interest the firm had in the stock passed to other parties before the transactions which will be stated. The details are unimportant, since the decision will be rested upon no consideration of any of these matters. The whole case turns upon the nature of the transaction between the company and Cook & Davis and the legal consequences which attach to it. The court found that the goods which are the subject of this action were sold by the company to Cook & Davis. It is impossible to treat that finding as one of fact, in any
In the absence of equitable considerations, or the intervention of rights which, under other and well recognized rules, are entitled to protection as against one who has put property into the possession of his agent or representative for the purposes of disposition, the law will never affix to a transaction any other character than that which the parties evidently intended to give it. Plainly a sale was not contemplated between the company and Davis. They assumed to each other no such relation as that held by vendor and vendee, and the title to the goods which were put in the possession of Davis cannot be taken to have passed from the company, unless there are other reasons than those growing out of the transaction itself which require that the rights of the attaching creditors shall be protected. Warner v. Martin, 11 How. 209; Burton et al. v. Goodspeed, 69 Ill. 237; Loomis et al. v. Barker, 69 Ill. 360; Edgerton et al. v. Michels et al., 66 Wis. 124.
There are no such considerations in this case. The creditors are without any equitable rights, and have no other
For the error committed by the court in holding as a matter of law upon the evidence that the transaction between the parties constituted a sale, the judgment in this case must be reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed.