20 Mo. 553 | Mo. | 1855
delivered the opinion of the court.
The only things essential to a valid sale of personal property at common law were, a proper subject, a price, and the consent of the contracting parties, and when these concurred, the sale was complete, and the title passed without any thing more. (2 Black. Com. 447. Bloxom v. Sanders, 4 Barn. & Cres. 941.) The term sale, however, in its largest sense, may include every agreement for the transferring of ownership, whether immediate or to be completed afterwards, and goods, in reference to the disposition of them by sale, may be considered as existing separately and ready for immediate delivery, or as a part of a larger mass- from which they must be separated by counting, weighing or measuring, or as goods to be
The general rule, however, is otherwise, and all. the different sorts of goods to which we have referred, except the first, are, under our law, the proper subjects only of executory agreements — contracts for the future sale and delivery of them.
The Roman law, however, it is said, dealt differently with, this subject. In that system of jurisprudence (Bell on Contract of Sale, 9,) “a sale was not an immediate transmutation-of property, but a contract of mutual and personal engagements for the transference of the thing on the one hand and the-payment of the price on the other, without regard to the time of performance on either part, that being left to be regulated by the agreement of fhe parties, the seller being bound to deliver the thing in property to the buyer at the time agreed on,, and the buyer to pay the price in the manner settled between, them. The distinction was carefully observed between the direct right of property (jus in re) conferred by delivery, and the-indirect right (jus ad rem) to demand of the seller delivery of the thing sold. There thus arose out of the contract the double relation of debtor and creditor, as to the thing sold and the price to be paid for it. Corresponding with these relations, two actions were given, both personal and direct; one for the thing sold, the other for the price due. The claim for the price being absolute on delivery or tender of the thing and the demand for the thing conditional, provided it had not in the mean, time perished without fault of the seller.” Thus it is se.en, a Roman sale was applicable to all the possible circumstances in
Although at common law consent alone was sufficient to constitute a valid sale, the statute of frauds has now intervened, and other formalities are prescribed, which must be observed, or what was before a valid transfer of property is now of no validity. The statute, beginning where the common law stopped, requires some one of these solemnities to be added to the transaction before it shall be considered as complete, so as to effect a change of ownership ; and the matter here relied upon, as the statute evidence of the completion of the contract, was the change of possession. This provision of the statute implies, it is said, a delivery of the thing sold on the part of the debtor, and an acceptance of it by the buyer, with an intention on the one side to part with, and on the other to accept the ownership of it; and it is not enough that the mere natural, actual, corporeal possession should be changed, but there must be a change of the civil possession, which is a holding of the thing with the design of keeping it as owner ; aud this brings us to an examination of the instruction complained of, and which resulted in nonsuiting the plaintiff.
The proof given shows (or, at least, conduces to show, which, ¡'for the present purpose, is the same thing,) that the thing sold ¡had been delivered in point of fact to the buyer, and the true question in the cause, (indeed the only one that could be raised,) was, whether this change of actual possession was also a (change of the civil possession; or, in other words, whether (the hogs were delivered and received by the parties respectively, with the intention of changing the ownership. If the facts were so, the sale was perfect, the title passed, and the loss fell upon the new owner.
It is to be remarked that this is the sale of a specific commodity., the whole drove, and not of a part, to be ascertained by counting out the required number, and therefore, the title passed ■ as soon as the bargain was completed by the delive
Nor is there any objection to the validity of this transaction as a present sale, growing out of the supposed uncertainty as to the price. Although there is no sale until the price is settled between the parties, yet it is settled, within the meaning of this rule, when the terms of it are so fixed that the sum to be paid can be ascertained without further reference to the parties themselves ; and, indeed, by the common law, the price is fixed within this rule, even when it appears that the parties have agreed that it shall be the reasonable worth of the thing sold, leaving it to the tribunals to ascertain the amount, if they cannot agree upon it themselves. (Bell on Sales, 18-20. Acebol v. Levy, 10 Bing. 382.)
This, then, was a present agreement between these parties for the sale of a specific commodity for a pifice settled between them, so as to be capable of future ascertainment, without further reference to themselves, and, we repeat, immediately passed the title to the buyer, if the ceremony of delivery required by the statute of frauds was complied with, and there having been a delivery in fact, the whole question was, as before remarked, with what intention that delivery was made, whether merely that the hogs might be weighed, neither party being bound in the mean time by what had passed between them, or as the formal completion of the bargain to bind the parties and vest the ownership in the purchaser.
We come now to an examination of the instruction complained
We shall content ourselves by a reference to a few cases which we consider directly in point, in support of the position we have taken. Scott v. Wills, (6 Watts & Serg. 868,) was a case of the sale of a raft of lumber at twelve dollars per thousand feet, to be ascertained by measurement. There had been a delivery, and the raft being lost by a freshet, the question was, whether the property passed so as to cast the loss upon the buyer. The court below instructed the jury that “ parties may make a sale of goods so as to pass the property by the actual delivery thereof, without first fixing the.quantity upon which the price is to be computed,” and the Supreme Court approved of the direction, Judge Gibson remarking, “ that a sale is imperfect only when it is left open for the addition of terms necessary to complete it, or where it is defective in some indispensable ingredient, which cannot be supplied from extrinsic sources. But when possession is delivered pursuant to a contract which contains no provision for additional terms, the parties evince, in a way not to be mistaken, that they suppose the bargain to be consummated.”
Macomber v. Parker, (18 Pick. Rep. 182,) was a sale of a quantity of brick in a kiln at a certain rate per thousand, to be ascertained by counting, and the court, in delivering its opinion says : " It is true the bricks were to be counted, but that was to be done to enable the parties to come to a settlement of their accounts, and not for the purpose of completing the sale. Taking the whole of Hunting’s testimony together, this we think is the reasonable inference to be drawn from it. If the bricks had been actually delivered, there could have been no question that the sale would have been complete, notwithstanding the bricks were to be afterwards counted. The general principle is, that when an operation of weight, measure
The remarks of the same court in Riddle v. Varnum, (20 Pick. 283-4,) to which we have been reared by the counsel for the respondents are not intended to conflict with what had been previously determined, but expressly affirm that decision.
It is true the court say that “the party affirming the sale must satisfy the jury that it was intended to be an absolute transfer, and all that remained to be done was merely for the purpose of ascertaining the price of the articles sold at the sale agreed upon.” And of this there can be no doubt, but yet that is a matter for the jury, and it is not intimated in this case that when there is an actual delivery, the jury cannot be allowed to infer such intention without some additional evidence.
These questions generally arise when the thing sold has perished, and the contest is upon whom the loss shall fall, and it may not be improper here to remark that, notwithstanding the marked difference between a Boman and a common law sale, in other particulars, when a loss occurs, it falls upon the same person under either system. Under our law, the maxim is that the owner bears the loss, a rule, it would seem, of universal application, res perit domino. Under the Roman law, the debtor of a specific thing was not answerable for its loss, when it perished in his hands without fault, and when there had been a purchase of a specific commodity, although the property was
We repeat what we have before said, it is a question for the jury. If the delivery were for the purpose of passing the property, it had that effect, although the price was to be afterwards ascertained and paid according to the net weight, and there is no rule of law that, under such circumstances, the presumption arising from the delivery is met and repelled, and that other evidence becomes necessary in order to make out a prima facie case of a present sale. The seller has a right, notwithstanding the bargain, to retain his property till he is paid, unless he agrees to allow the purchaser a credit (the bargain for an immediate transfer of property implying a present payment of the price,) and hence, when there is no understanding as to the time of payment other than what is implied in the postponement of it until the quantity of the thing sold is ascertained in the manner indicated in the contract, this circumstance is certainly entitled to consideration with the jury, in determining the character of the delivery, which, if intended to pass the thing in property, deprives the seller of his security upon it for the price, at the same time that it throws upon the buyer the future risk. The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded.