67 Vt. 427 | Vt. | 1895
This case has been twice argued and much considered, and this is the first time we have been able to dispose of it. The question is, whether the vendor of personal property sold conditionally with a lien reserved thereon seasonably recorded can maintain an action on the case against the purchaser’s' bailee thereof for injuring the same after thirty days from the time of condition broken. To decide this question it is necessary to determine the nature and extent of the interest that such a vendor has in the property. Before any legislation on the subject this was not doubtful, for the court had repeatedly held that full payment of the price was a condition precedent to the vesting of title in the vendee, and that until such payment the vendor was the sole owner of the property, with an absolute right of possession on condition broken, the vendee not having even an attachable interest therein, and the vendor having a right to recover the full value thereof for a conversion. In 1854 an act was passed whereby the vendee’s creditors could attach the property and discharge the vendor’s claim thereon by payment; but this act did not otherwise affect the vendor’s rights. Subsequently statutes were passed that such sales should not be valid against attaching creditors-and purchasers without notice unless the vendor took a written memorandum thereof, and caused it to be recorded in the town clerk’s office within a certain time. But the contract was valid between the parties without such memorandum. Thus the law stood when the act of 1884 was passed. That act relates to the removal of the property from the state, to the discharge of the lien thereon, and to the sale thereof by the vendor, and provides, among other things, that after thirty days from the time of condition broken, the ven
In Ballard v. Burgett, 40 N. Y. 314, Grover, J., styles such an agreement an executory contract that the title shall pass on the happening of the stipulated event, namely, payment of the price. Mr. Story distinguishes it from a purely executory contract in this, that an executory contract is absolutely to sell at a future time, while a conditional contract is conditionally to sell. In the one case, he says, the performance of the contract is suspended, and deferred to a future time; in the other, the very existence and performance of the contract depends upon a contingency. Story, Cont. s. 246. But however this is put, it is considered by the majority that the vendor’s title is precisely the same in legal nature that it was before the passage of the statute, and that the remedies adapted to the enforcement of his rights remain to him the same as before, except so far as they are superceded by the statute, and that they are not thus superceded to the extent of taking away the remedy here resorted to, if such a remedy ever existed, of which there can be little doubt. In Massachusetts a conditional vendee is called a bailee for a specific purpose, and only a bailee; Coggill v. Hartford & New Haven R. R. Co. 3 Gray 547 ; and is allowed to recover the full value of the property for a conversion after the vendor’s right of possession has attached, on the ground that he stands in the position of a bailee answerable over. Harrington v. Russell, 121 Mass. 269. Although the vendee may not be strictly a bailee, we think he is properly classed as standing in the position of a bailee, which places the vendor in the position of a bailor. Standing thus, each can maintain all the rights that the law has thus far accorded to them, and their position is fairly well defined.
At the time in question the wagon was rightfully in the possession of the vendee, and no question is made but that
The defendant’s paying to the vendee by crediting him on account the amount they agreed upon as damages, does not bind the plaintiff, for that was a disposition of the plaintiff’s property without his consent for the benefit of the vendee, which the latter had no authority to make.
Judgment affirmed.