79 Fla. 143 | Fla. | 1920
On November 23rd, 1916, the defendant in execution appears to have been a dealer in pianos, and by virtue of á rent contract with the plaintiff was occupying a building of hers in the city of Ocala, and theretofore and thereafter continued to be the tenant of the plaintiff and continued to be such dealer until the issuance of the distress warrant in this case on May 25th, 1917, and on said November 23rd, 1916, the defendant entered into a contract with, the claimant.
The contract between the claimant and the defendant in execution provides that all pianos ordered or received by the defendant shall be held on consignment for sale, and that the title to the instruments, and the proceeds
1. The defendant to pay all expenses after the instrument leaves Cincinnati, all expenses of collection of proceeds of sale made by him, recording and attorneys’ fees, is l’esponsible for the safekeeping, and to keep them insured in name of claimant at consignment price.
2. The defendant to profit by selling the instrument for more than the value fixed at the time of consignment, plus such expenses, he to report full settlement for all sales as made, if sold for cash to remit the wholesale price or value in cash, and if on time to send original contracts of sale, mortgages or liens, and shall retain for his own use only one-half the cash payment, sending under all circumstances money or paper to cover the wholesale price, and that his customers shall pay claimant at least six per cent per annum on deferred payments, and the defendant guarantees in case of sale the payment to claim- ■ ant the wholesale price with six per cent interest.
8. The defendant agrees that if any of his customers fail to pay as agreed that he will repossess the instrument at his expense, or pay for its being done, and failing to repossess that he will pay, and if not repossessed that the instrument shall be disposed of by reconsignment or return to claimant.
4. The defendant agrees to sell under supervision of claimant, and when he makes one that is not satisfactory, to make it so in one of three ways.
5. The instruments may be returned any time at the option and expense of defendant, or the return may be required at any time at the option of the claimánt at the
6. The defendant agrees to try to sell within four months of the consignment of an instrument, and agrees to compensate the claimant for his failure to make such sale by paying as compensation for the use thereof six per cent per annum for such further time as It may remain unsold.
7. The defendant agrees to make monthly reports as to all instruments consigned to him.
8. The defendant agrees that his commissions can not be assigned or transferred without the consent of claimant, but leaves the commission with claimant for security for .any indebtedness or liability whether arising under the contract or otherwise.
9. The agreement was that it be executed and construed under the laws of Ohio and that nothing contained in'the writing should in any sense be construed as constituting a sale of the instruments and then there is an agreement as to termination of the contract, and there were certain rules for the disposition of instruments and minimum terms on time sales.
The pianos in question were shipped to the defendant in December, 1916, under the contract; reports as provided in the contract were made as to them on December 30th, 1916, January 31st, 1917, February 19, 1917, and March 15th, 1917. The levy of the distress warrant was made May 25th, 1917, returnable June 2nd, 1917, for the rent of a store building from November 1st,, 1915, to May 1st, 1917, and which distress proceeding resulted in final judgment on June 12th, 1917. The.claim proceeding was instituted on June 28th, 1917, and this finally
Tt will be observed that some of the rent had accrued before the making of the contract between tlie claimant and the defendant, and much more of it before the pianos were received by the defendant. Under these facts the learned Circuit Judge directed a verdict for the claimant, and the question is thus presented .whether or not the plaintiff in execution acquired a lien upon such property so brought upon the leased premises.
The contract between the claimant and the defendant is not a contraed of sale, and the relation of vendor and purchaser was not contemplated by them. Was the relation created that of employment of the defendant by the claimant to receive on consignment and to sell as agent pianos in accordance with the agreement between them, or ivas the defendant in a sense a purchaser, a mortgagor or the owner of such property? Or did the relation of debtor and creditor exist? And this decision must be made independently of any recordation statute.
There is and in the very nature of the case there can be no question of constructive notice to affect the contention of the plaintiff in execution. Had the pianos in question been sold to a purchaser by the defendant and the sale completed by payment and delivery such sale Avould have invested the purchaser with good title as against claimant whether it received payment from the defendant or not, for the reason that both the claimant and the defendant intended and contemplated at the time they entered into their contract, and at all times thereafter AVhile it was in existence that such instruments should be sold by defendant in the course of business to some purchaser. The claimant would have
The writer assumes that the contract between complainant and defendant would form a basis for a fiduciary relation the necessary predicate for conviction of embezzlement.
' There is hardly any conflict among the authorities as to the distinction between a sale and a consignment of personal property for sale, the difficulty arises only in an application of the principle to the particular transaction. * * The primary test as to the character of the contract is the intention of the parties * * *. Vermont Marble Co. v. Brow, 109 Cal. 236, 41 Pac. Rep. 1031, 50 Am. St. Rep. 37.
The important question in this ’ case in the mind of the writer is whether or not under the circumstances the pianos in question had been simply consigned by claimant to defendant for sale, or whether or not under the law he was such a purchaser of the pianos as to ren
A sale may be defined “a transmutation of property from one man to another in consideration of some price or value.” “A transfer of the property in a chattel for a consideration.” “Transfer of the absolute or general property in a thing for a price in money * * * that it means at all times a contract to pass rights of property for money which the buyer pays or agrees to pay to the seller for the thing bought and sold.” 23 R. C. L. 1186.
In the case of a sale an agreed price is essential, but it is altogether needless in the case of a mere exchange, but where property is taken for a fixed money price the transfer amounts to a sale whether the price be paid in money or in goods. 23 R. C. L. 120. “Where a seller retains title to thing sold until the price is paid, the transaction is a conditional sale.” Bass, Heard & Howle v. International Harvester Co. of America, 169 Ala. 154, 53 South. Rep. 1014. A contract of sale by which, the title to goods is to remain in the vendor until paid for or sold in due course of trade by the vendee, to Avhom they are delivered, is valid, and a purchaser from him in due course of trade takes a good title, Avhile others not so purchasing can not rely upon hi's bare possession as conclusive evidence of title. Pratt v. Burhans, 84 Mich. 487, 47 N. W. Rep. 1064, 22 Am. St. Rep. 703. The case of Ludden v. Hazen, 31 Barb. (N. Y.) 650, has been cited by counsel and is authority for the statement “the law tolerates a
This court has repeatedly recognized the law to be that a conditional sale is valid and binding between the parties, as AAell upon purchasers and creditors of the conditional vendee. Campbell Mfg. Co. v. Walker, 22 Fla. 412; Dannelly v. Russ, 54 Fla. 285, 45 South Rep. 496; Onyx Soda Fountain Co. v. L’Engle, 53 Fla. 314, 43 South. Rep. 771. and that there is an exception to this general
The rule in cases of conditional sales as laid down by Cyc. 680-681 is approved, as follows: “If, however, the goods are sold to a retail dealer for the purpose of resale, or if consent to a resale in the ordinary course of trade is given, a bona fide purchaser acquires a good title.” Consign in mercantile law, as defined by 12 C. J. 526, for the purposes of the case at bar, is: “The term has a well defined legal meaning and signifies * * * to deposit with another to be sold,, disposed of or called for * * * to send goods to an agent * * * to be sold, to send or transfer goods to a merchant or factor for sale, * * the term implies an agency and applied in a commercial sense means that the property is committed or entrusted to the consignee for care or sale, and does not by any express or fair implication mean a sale by one or purchase by another,” citing Sturm v. Boker, 150 U. S. 312, 37 L. Ed. 1093, 14 Sup. Ct. Rep. 99, and to the same effect, 8 Cyc. 587.
In the well considered and annotated case of Fleet v. Hertz, 201 Ill. 594, 66 N. E. Rep. 858, 94 Am. St. Rep. 192. In 1892 Fleet was a dealer in furs in New York and Kesler, a manufacturer of furs into garments and selling furs and garments at wholesale and retail, and within four years before that time Fleet had sold to Kesler on credit several hundred dollars’ worth of furs and these were not paid for in full, Fleet wrote Kesler in substance that he would try to fix it so he could deal with him explaining that he was handling furs on account of others on a small commission; that the mercantile agencies did not regard Kesler in a very good light and declining to
As a creditor the plaintiff must acquire her right to property through Lattner. She can acquire no other' right than he had; if the claimant in this case ceased to own the property in question it was by virtue only of his contract with Lattner, and because he had a right under the contract of consignment as one of sale, and if Lattner had this right plaintiff had the same right. It was unquestionably the right and privilege of the claimant to consign its goods to Lattner for sale by him for them, its doing so was no fraud upon any one. In making consignments for sale the physical possession is generally transferred to the consignee, but the title and the right of control not inconsistent with the contract' of consignment remain with the consignor. There is no suggestion in the record that the transaction between claimant and defendant was otherwise than one which was honest, and made in entire good faith. The writer does not think there is any ground to claim that the claimant loses its right to the property by making an assignment which in its details is in all respects lawful and proper.
There was nothing in the conduct of the claimant as disclosed by the record in this case that would estop it or make it in any way inequitable or unjust for it to claim the property in question as its own and not liable to levy and sale under the execution mentioned in this case. And in the opinion of the writer the jury would
Per Curiam. — The record in this cause having been considered by this court, and the foregoing opinion i>re-pared under Chapter 7837, Acts of 1919, adopted by the court as its opinion, it is considered, ordered and adjudged by the court that the judgment herein be and the same is hereby affirmed.