delivered the opinion of the court
The appellant sold to one Kirby certain machinery and took installment notes for the purchase price, in which this clause occurs: “The express condition of the sale and purchase of said machinery for which this note is given is such that the title, ownership, or possession does not pass from said Corinth Engine & Boiler Works until this note, with interest, is paid in full.” In other words, the notes reserved the title, ownership', and possession until payment in full. The case was submitted to the judge upon an agreed statement of facts, after certain pre
“The Corinth Engine & Boiler Works, a Mississippi corporation, with its principal office in Corinth, in said state, sold in May, 1906, a car load of machinery to one E. O. Kirby, and said Corinth Engine & Boiler Works shipped said machinery, consisting of one engine and boiler and sawmill outfit, to said E. O. Kirby, at Hattiesburg, Miss. The Corinth Engine & Boiler "Works took from said Kirby a contract of sale, signed b;y the vendee, and in said contract retained title and ownership in and to all of said outfit until all of the notes given by Kirby for said machinery should be paid in full; the notes amounting in all to the sum of $1,250. In November, 1907, one J. N. Kirby delivered said car load of machinery to the Mississippi Central Railroad Company, defendant in this suit, for shipment from Eple'v, Miss., to White Sand, Miss.; the same being consigned to J. N. Kirby. That said shipment was made before all of said notes had been paid by said E. O. Kirby (Kirby had paid about $300.00), and without plaintiff’s knowledge or consent, and while plaintiff still held, in accordance with its contract of sale, the title. The Mississippi Central Railroad Company shipped the machinery from Epley to White Sand, and, the consignee, J. N. Kirby, failing to call for same, the railroad company held the machinery for freight and demurrage until it was turned over to Corinth Engine & Boiler Works, plaintiff herein, in accordance with their bond filed in this the present suit. At the time the Mississippi Central Railroad Company received the machinery for shipment, it did not know of plaintiff’s title claim, and received the freight from one lawfully in possession thereof, and offered to surrender the same upon payment of freight and demurrage charges. The sole question to be decided being whether plaintiff can recover in this suit without paying freight and demurrage charges due the defendant. -Teff Truly, Attorney for Defendant. Conn & Warriner, Attorneys for the Plaintiff.”
In the case of Robinson v. Baker, 59 Mass. 137, 51 Am. Dec. 54, the court said: “Thus the case stands upon direct and express authorities. How does it stand upon general principles ? In the case of Saltus v. Everett, 20 Wend. (N. Y.) 267, 32 Am. Dec. 541, it is said: “The universal and fundamental principle of our law of personal property is that no man can be divested of his property without his consent, and consequently that even the honest purchaser under a defective title cannot hold against the true proprietor.’ There is no case to be found, or any reason or analogy anywhere suggested, in the books, which would go to show that the real owner was concluded by a bill of lading not given by himself, but by some third person, erroneously or fraudulently. If the owner loses his property, or is robbed of it, or it is sold or pledged without his consent, by one who has
The case relied upon by the learned counsel for appellees, Vaughn v. Providence & Worcester Railroad Company, 13 R. I. 578, cited in note 72 to Hutchinson on Carriers, § 885, is not
This is merely one of many other cases which, in our judgment, show the necessity for requiring all reservations of titles to personal property to be recorded. We trust that the legislature will pass such a law speedily.
The result is that the judgment of the court below is reversed, and a judgment will be entered here for the appellant.
Reversed.