33 Vt. 332 | Vt. | 1860
The doctrine that an actual and visible change of possession must accompany every attachment and transfer of personal property was early adopted in this State, and has been steadily adhered to It has been treated as our settled policy, and the business habits of our citizens have been conformed to it. Under our system of attachment, its practical application is of frequent occurrence, and numerous decisions of our courts have defined and illustrated its operation. From a rule of law so long settled and so well understood and relied upon by the comipunity, we are not at liberty to depart. The decisions in
The reasons upon which our policy was founded are admirably set forth by Judge Prentiss, in Weeks v. Weed, 2 Aik. They are, first, to diminish fraudulent sales, in fact, by preventing the debtor from securing a benefit to himself by depriving him of the possession of the property; and secondly, to prevent the public from being misled to give a false credit to the former owner, who, by continuance in possession after a sale, would appear to the world as the real owner.
This principle has been applied to all transfers, (such as sales, pledges, mortgages and assignments,) and all attachments of personal property.
There must be a substantial and visible change of possession to protect the property from subsequent attachment. Knowledge of the former attachment by the creditor will not stand in lieu of a change of possession, or suffice to protect the property.
The rule is peremptory and universal in its application to all property in the possession of the debtor at the time of the attachment or transfer. But a distinction has been made between property in the hands of the debtor, and property in the hands of a third person, at the time of the attachment. Where the chattels sold or attached are in the hands of a third person, no visible change of possession is required, provided the vendee or creditor gives notice to such third person of his purchase or attachment. This decision was first made in Barney v. Brown, 2 Vt., and has been repeatedly affirmed; 2 Vt. 555; 5 Vt. 231; 4 Vt. 464; 8 Vt. 344; 16 Vt. 580; 13 Vt. 418 and 558. The opinion of Judge Collamer in Fierce v. Chipman, 8 Vt. 344, shows very fully the ground of the distinction. Possession of either real or personal property by a third person is notice to the world that the title of the former possessor has been transferred ; and purchasers or creditors dealing with the property are put upon inquiry, and are affected with knowledge of all the facts which by reasonable inquiry they could ascertain. Hence, when the property is in the possession of a third person there is an obligation upon a subsequent attaching creditor to inquire ap to
The possession by a third party, with notice of the transfer or attachment, thus stands in place of a visible change of possession, because such possession is notice to the world of some change of ownership and puts creditors upon inquiry. But when such possession does not carry any such notice to the world, it does not stand in place of a visible change of possession. This is illustrated by the decision in Sleeper v. Pollard, 28 Vt. 709. The property was in the sole possession of the hired man of the vendor, who was notified by the vendee, in the presence of the vendor, of the sale, and who agreed to take care of the property for the vendee. This was held not to be a sufficient change of possession ; for the possession of the hired man was merely the possession of the vendor. When the blown servant of the vendor remains in possession, and there is nothing visible to indicate a change of title, it appears to the world just the same as if the vendor himself remained in possession. There is nothing to put one on inquiry. In this case, too, it is to be observed that the possession of the servant was not held to be the possession of the master because it was inconsistent with his duty as a servant to agree, or because he did not legally agree, to take care of the property for the vendee. His agreement was made with the vendee in the presence of his master, and as between the vendor, the vendee and the hired man, the agreement was legal and binding, and he became quoad hoc the servant of the vendee with the consent of his master. But quoad the world he appeared to be in possession as the servant of the vendor, and hence it was held to be the possession of the vendor. See also Stiles v. Shumway, 16 Vt. 435.
There is another class of cases which we must consider, and to which the case at bar is claimed to belong ; cases of joint or concurrent possession by the vendor and vendee, or by the debtor and attaching creditor.
Allen v. Edgerton, 3 Vt. 442, is an early case of this kind, and has often been referred to and approved in subsequent decisions. Alien was surety for Seeley. Seeley owned cloths and yarn in
The tenor of all these decisions is the same, viz : that possession by the former owner as a joint owner, is a joint possession ; and that if a careful observer would be at a loss to determine who had the chief control, who was at the head of the business, then it is a joint possession. The rule does not say that then it is his duty to inquire, or to presume a change when it is reasonably doubtful; but that then, the possession is joint and the sale is void. This is in entire consistency with the long settled rule, that there must be a substantial and visible change of possession when the property, at the time of the sale or attachment, is in the possession of the vendor. If there is such a change, a careful observer will not be at a loss to determine who owns and has possession of the property. If it is doubtful, the law resolves the doubt against the party who should make the change of possession open and visible to the world. In cases therefore of joint possession of property, which, when sold or attached, was in the hands of the vendor or debtor, the creditor is not bound to inquire. It is sufficient if he carefully observes.
If the result of such observation is, that a third person, and not the debtor or vendor, is in possession, then he must understand that there has been a change of possession, and he is affected with a knowledge of all the facts which by inquiry he could ascertain. But if the result is that the debtor or vendor is in exclusive possession, or is in joint possession with another as a joint owner, or, (which is the same thing,) if he is at a loss to determine whether the debtor or a third person is in the chief possession and control of the property, then he may attach and hold the property as against the former vendee or attaching creditor ; and his notice or knowledge of a former sale or attachment does not defeat such subsequent attachment.
I. Applying these principles to this case, it is claimed by the plaintiff that there was a sufficient change of possession because the property attached was put into the possession of Mills and he agreed to take care of it. .But Mills had been up to the time of the attachment the hired man of the debtor Knight, — living
It is said in the bill of exceptions that “ Mills by the direction of Flanagan was to have the exclusive charge of the cattle attached and did have such a possession as the facts detailed show.” But the facts detailed do not show, that he had any possession of the cattle different from what he had before the attachment, or different from what hired men usually have, or different from what he had after the attachment of Knight’s cow and horses not attached, or that he kept the cattle attached separate or in any way distinguishable from those not attached.
So too it is said that everything on the farm remained after as before the attachment, “ except as above stated but when we look over the exceptions to see what is excepted and above stated that did not remain on the farm after as before the attachment, we are unable to find it. We are unable to perceive that Mills did anything in relation to the property attached after the attachment that he did not do before, or that Knight did or omitted to
It is said that Mills ceased to be the hired man of Knight and was to be paid by Flanagan ; but this rested wholly in contract between the parties, and the outward appearance of his labor was still that of service to Knight-; for he not only took care of the property attached, but of that also that was not attached, the same as before. The possession of a mere servant or hired man is but the possession of the master, and does not like the possessionof other third persons put the creditor on inquiry; 28 Vt. 709. To give it that effeet there should be some change in the labor, or something external to show to the world the new relation. Mere contract resting between the parties has no such effect. We think therefore that there is nothing in substance, so far as Mills’ possession of the property is concerned, to distingush the case from Sleeper v. Pollard, in the 28th Vt.
There are some considerations which make this case stronger against the plaintiff than the case in the 28th. There the possession of the farm on which the property remained was solely in the hired man ; here the hired man is not stated to have had any possession of the farm and could not have had any except for the mere purpose of keeping the property attached upon it, while the debtor had and was intended to have the chief control and management of it during the lease, from the 7th of March to the 7th of June. Flanagan could not have intended undeir a lease for that short time to have done the usual spring’s work on the farm, or to have excluded Knight from doing it. Again in Sleeper v. Pollard, the vendor had no beneficial use of the property sold, while here the debtor had some beneficial use of the property ; he had all the milk of the cows attached that his family needed, and all that he could- have from the young • cattle was their growth, for they were fed on the hay attached and not attached without distinction, and precisely as they would have been if not attached. It is said by Collamer, J., in Pierce v. Ghipman, and approved by Bennett, J., 23 Vt. 87, that the possession and beneficial use of the property by the vendor after the sale is conclusive evidence against it. Indeed it is the policy and very
II. it is also claimed by the plaintiff that the lease changed the possession of the property on the farm. This leads us to inquire how far the actual or constructive possession of land may dispense with a removal of personal property situate upon it, in case of sale or attachment.
A deed or lease of land conveys the legal right of possession, but does not necessarily change the possession from the grantor to the grantee. This consideration should be borne in mind in examining those cases where the change of possession of personal property is sought to be established, not by any actual taking, but by construction through possession of the land on which it is situate.
1. If the grantee take actual and exclusive possession of the land the personal property on it upon purchase is of course in his possession, and no removal is necessary. This principle is too obvious to require a citation of authorities. Burrows v. Stebbins, in 26 Vt. 663, was really such a case 5 and so upon one view is Hooper v. Wilson, 12 Vt. 656.
2. If the grantor buy land not in the possession of another, though he do not take actual possession, still possession by construction follows the right; and if he buy personal property situate on the land, by his constructive possession of the land he also acquires constructive possession of the personalty, and no removal is necessary. Wilson v. Hooper, 12 Vt. 656. This applies to all wild or Unoccupied land, and to land left vacant by the grantor.
3. If one sell personal property situate on the land of a third person, who agrees to keep it or allows it to remain on his land for the benefit of the vendee, the vendor after that having no ostensible occupancy of the land or control of the property, such property is held to be in the possession of a third person, and no removal is necessary. Merritt v. Miller, 13 Vt. 416; Potter v. Washburn, 13 Vt. 558.
4. But where the land sold or leased remains in the actual possession of the vendor or lessor, there no constructive possession of the personal property on it can be raised for the aid of the vendee or lessee against such actual possession; for this would make the constructive possession more potential than the actual and apparent one.
So where the vendor and vendee, or the lessor and lessee remain in the joint possession of the land, the same rule as to change of possession of personalty applies as in the joint possession of personal property alone ; viz: that if the possession of the vendee or lessee is apparently that of a joint owner, and there is no actual and exclusive possession of the personal property by the vendee, the personal property on the land will be deemed to be in their joint possession also, and a sale or attachment of it without removal will be void.
This is recognized in Stephenson v. Clark, 20 Vt. 624, though the case was remanded because the evidence tending to show actual possession by the vendee was not left to the jury. Mills v. Warner, 19 Vt. 609; Stiles v. Shumway, 16 Vt. 435.
The recent case of Parker v. Kendrick, 29 Vt. 388, is an authority to the same point. Parker and Tarbell wore partners and joint owners of a tannery and its stock, Parker having the sole and exclusive management of it. Tarbell bought of Parker his half of the tannery stock, gave him a note of one thousand and fifty dollars, and a mortgage of the stock in the tannery to secure the note. The mortgage provided “that Parker might have the use of the tannery for the purpose of holding possession of the stock but Tarbell “ reserved the right to carry on the tannery in any way he might choose by at all times keeping the stock good so as not to impair Parker’s security.” The evidence of the plain
So in the case at bar, Flanagan took a lease, not with the intent and for the purpose which the lease on its face expresses, “ to use and occupy it as a farm,” but as the bill of exceptions states “ to enable him, as he supposed, to leave the property attached in safety on the farm and with no other intent nor for any other purpose” The leases to Parker and Flanagan were for precisely similar purposes. Knight remained on the farm, occupying it apparently precisely as before. Flanagan took no possession of the farm by himself. Mills who had been Knight’s hired man, is not said to. have taken any possession of the farm for Flanagan, nor does he appear to have done anything on the farm either different from wha.t he was used to do as the servant of Knight, or indicative in any way of a possession by or of a service for Flanagan.
But granting that he was in possession under Flanagan, he was obviously in possession only jointly with Knight — a possession wholly undistinguishable from Knight’s and with nothing to show to the world that Knight did not remain as he had been at the head of the business.
Upon all the facts indeed it seems to us rather an apparent exclusive possession by Knight, than joint by him with Mills. Against such an actual possession by Knight neither a lease nor even a deed on record could operate to give to the lessee or
As therefore the plaintiff had no sufficient possession either by himself or his servant, nor any sufficient constructive possession by the lease, we must hold the judgment of the county court erroneous.
As to the other point made by the plaintiff, we think the law too well settled in this State to require any elucidation, that if a public officer in the outset does legally take possession of property attached, yet if he afterwards allow it to pass into the hands of the debtor, the attachment is void as to a subsequent attaching creditor.
Judgment reversed, and judgment for the defendants to recover their costs.