127 A. 294 | Vt. | 1925
H. Waite Son, creditors of Walter H. Isham, sued out a writ of attachment and by virtue thereof on June 2, 1921, attached a certain automobile as the property of Isham. They obtained judgment in the action at the December Term, 1921, of Lamoille county court and seasonably thereafter took *323 out execution on the judgment and caused it to be levied on the automobile which had been attached. Later by their direction the automobile was duly sold under the execution. The defendant, as a deputy sheriff, made the attachment and the subsequent levy and sale. He took possession of the property attached and retained the possession until it was sold on the execution. Subsequent to the sale the plaintiff brought this action of trover for the conversion of the automobile. The issue at the trial was whether the plaintiff had title to the automobile good as against an attaching creditor of Isham. The trial was by jury and at the close of the evidence each party moved for a directed verdict in his favor. The court overruled the plaintiff's motion and directed a verdict for the defendant. The exceptions taken to this action present the only questions for review.
It appeared in evidence that on May 23, 1921, the plaintiff purchased two automobiles of Isham, paying him $1,000 in cash for the same. Isham gave the plaintiff a bill of sale, which recited that he gave the plaintiff possession of the cars that day. The automobile in question, a seven passenger Hudson touring car, had been purchased by Isham of Henry Puffer of Richford, Vermont, and was at the time of the sale to the plaintiff in Puffer's possession at Richford. The plaintiff took immediate possession of the other car, a Chevrolet roadster, and took it to his home in Morrisville. Some three days later Isham brought the Hudson car to the plaintiff's premises. The latter testified on this subject as follows: "Walter Isham brought it to me and I had it in my charge and my barn. The first night I kept it there to home and the next day we made trip to Montreal, or the next day but perhaps one." It was in evidence that the plaintiff and Isham with their wives took a trip to Montreal in the car and that Isham drove the car on the trip "the biggest part of the way." They returned from Montreal on May 31, 1921. On their return the car was put in the plaintiff's barn. Isham used it after the sale whenever he wished. It was not kept in Isham's barn nights, but in the plaintiff's barn. The plaintiff testified that he let Isham have the car to run around town with as he wished — "him and his family" — and that he was so using the car at the time it was attached. When attached the car was standing in the yard of the house where Isham lived. He had been using it to run around the village and was "at the car" when attachment was made. During the time in question the *324 car was registered in Isham's name and the plaintiff took no steps to have the registration changed up to the time of the sale on execution. The plaintiff was at that time a dealer in trucks and second-hand cars and had a dealer's license. The evidence was meager as to the use the plaintiff made of the car. He testified that he drove part of the way on the Montreal trip, and one witness, a garage man, testified that the plaintiff drove the Hudson car to the garage for gasoline and oil on one occasion before the Montreal trip and that he saw him with the car several times. It appeared that as soon as the plaintiff learned of the attachment he notified the defendant that the car was his and protested against the attachment and subsequent sale.
In the circumstances it was the duty of the court to sustain one or the other of the motions for a directed verdict. Where the facts are undisputed it is with us a question of law whether these facts constitute such a change of possession as will protect the property from attachment by the vendor's creditors.Burrows v. Stebbins,
The court held, in sustaining the defendant's motion, that there was not a change of possession of the automobile from Isham to the plaintiff sufficient in law to protect it from attachment *325
by Isham's creditors. What constitutes sufficient change of possession to perfect a sale of chattel necessarily varies with the circumstances of each particular case. There are, however, certain general requirements respecting the change of possession which must be present in order to make it sufficient. It must be open, visible, unequivocal, exclusive, continued — such as to apprise the community, or those accustomed to deal with the vendor, of the fact that he has ceased to be the owner of the property. Moore v. Kelley,
The following pertinent rules are to be found in the cases: The vendee must at his peril see to it that he so conducts with the property as to indicate to an observer by the appearances a change in ownership. Weeks v. Wead, supra; Stanley v. Robbins,supra. Actual possession and beneficial use of the property by the vendor after sale are inconsistent therewith, and are conclusive evidence against it so far as the rights of creditors are concerned. Pierce v. Chipman, supra. It does not follow that the vendee may never thereafter with safety permit the vendor to have to do with the property. After the sale has become perfected by such a visible, notorious, and continued change of possession that the creditors of the vendor may be presumed to have notice of it, the vendee can lend or let it to the vendor with the same safety as to a stranger. Dewey v. Thrall,
Tested by these rules it must be held that the evidence does not show such a change of possession as would protect the automobile from attachment by Isham's creditors. The character and extent of the plaintiff's possession in connection with Isham's possession and use of the car was not calculated to indicate a change of ownership, but on the contrary was equivocal and would leave an observer in doubt as to which was exercising control of the car. It follows that the court did not err in directing a verdict for the defendant. The plaintiff refers specially to Farnsworth v. Shepard, supra; but careful attention to the facts of that and the instant case makes their dissimilarity at once apparent.
Judgment affirmed.