Ely v. Ormsby

12 Barb. 570 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1851

By the Court,

Pratt, J.

The only question in this case is, whether the title to the horses passed to the plaintiff by what took place between him and Salisbury. The price of the horses, according to Salisbury’s testimony, was to be $300. Ho note or memorandum of the pretended sale was made at the time. Was the purchase money or any part of it paid, or was there any acceptance of the property by the purchaser within the requirements of the statute 1 I have not been able to find any evidence in the case that either of the acts made necessary by the statute to render a sale of property exceeding the value of fifty dollars, complete, was performed by the parties. In the first place, the price was to be indorsed upon the mortgage, but there is no pretense that any such indorsement was in fact made.

The cases of Artcher v. Zeh, (5 Hill, 200,) and Shindler v. Houston, (1 Comst. 261,) are conclusive on this point. It was held in those cases that words alone would not answer the requirements of the statute; that it required acts to be done, *572and such a construction is the only one which can, under all circumstances, secure the benefits -intended to be secured, and prevent the mischiefs intended to be prevented by that statute. In the second place, there was no such delivery by the vendor and acceptance by the purchaser as the statute requires. There was no delivery at the time of the pretended sale. I do not understand that Salisbury took the horses to Syracuse as agent for the plaintiff, or that by the consent that he might sell them it was intended that he should sell them as his agent. But the horses were in Salisbury’s possession apparently as owner, and the plaintiff permitted him to keep such possession and sell them, not in his name as agent, but in his own name as owner, accounting to him for the price; but if he intended that he should hold them as agent, I do not think it would alter the case. The statute in regard to acceptance, when the party depends upon that to render the sale valid, requires that acts unequivocal should furnish the evidence of such acceptance, and not words alone. The acceptance must be clear and unequivocal. The court will not allow a constructive acceptance to be sufficient. (3 B. & Ald. 680. 5 Id. 855.) The evidence in this case fails to show even an intent on the part of the purchaser that the vendor should retain possession of the property as the agent of the former. There was, therefore, clearly no acceptance by the purchaser, within the meaning of the statute. It was suggested upon the argument that the defendant could not set up the statute, and a case was cited to that effect, (1 Fair. 374;) but the question here is, in whom was the title to the horses vested at the time of the levy. The statute requires, in order to complete the sale and vest the title in the purchaser, that certain acts should be done—certain solemnities should be observed. Until these requisites of the statute are fulfilled, no title of any kind passes as between the purchaser and creditors of the vendors. At the same time no title passes as between the parties to the contract: that would open wide the doors for frauds and be a very convenient method of enabling a party to put his creditors at defiance. But the case of Artcher v. Zeh, above cited, is conclusive also upon this point. That was not a suit between the *573parties to the contract, and yet the defendant set up the statute and succeeded.

[Onondaga General Term, November 3, 1851.

The learned judge therefore erred in not charging the jury as requested; and the judgment must be reversed and a new trial ordered, costs to abide the event.

Pratt, Gridley, Allen and IJjtMard, Justices.]

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