15 Ind. App. 34 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1896
The appellants sued the appellees to recover the possession of a carload of wheat. Qn the trial of the cause appellants gave evidence which tended to prove these facts: The appellants were millers engaged in manufacturing flour and corn meal. The appellee, Calvin Holmes, was a dealer in grain, wheat and flour. The appellants had sold to Holmes a bill of flour and there was a balance due from him to them of $109.40. This balance was represented in an open account. The appellants’ mill was situated at the town of Burney, and Holmes did business at a place known as Letts Corner, the two places being several miles apart. On the 29th of October,
At the conclusion of the evidence, the court instructed the jury to return a verdict for the appellees; The appellants insist that this action of the court was erroneous; that the question of whether or not there was a valid and enforcible contract entered into should have been left to the jury.
The general rule is that' if there be any evidence having any legal weight upon any controverted fact,
The appellant insists that the contract is taken out of the operation of this statute for two reasons: (1) That the agreement to credit the amount due from Holmes to them operated as a partial payment; and (2) that there was in legal effect a delivery of the carload of wheat to them.
Anything, however small in value, which is given in earnest or part payment will take the transaction out of the statute. But an agreement to apply a precedent debt in payment will not relieve the transaction from the operation of the statute unless a receipt or credit is actually given. In Story on Sales, section 273, the rule is stated thus: “And an agreement to accept, as part payment, a debt before due from the vendee, independent of the transaction, does not satisfy the statute, for this is nothing more than a payment of the previous debt in part of the goods, with a sale of the remainder. In such a case the agreement to accept the debt in payment is a portion of the contract itself, and is not an act of part-payment done1 in furtherance of it, and therefore is open to all the ob
Was there such a delivery of the car of wheat as prevented the operation of the statute? The vendor may sell the property and retain the possession for the vendee as his agent, and such a delivery will be valid, but to do so there must be an agreement to that effect. Holmes did not put the appellants into possession, nor was there any agreement that he should retain the possession for them. His control or dominion over the property had not entirely ceased. He was required to “bill the car out” and send the bill of lading to the appellants. Until this was done the contract was still executory.
The appellants rely very confidently upon the cases of Bertelson v. Bower, 81 Ind 512, and Mariz v. Putnam, 117 Ind. 392, and insist that according to the principles there announced this sale is taken out of the statute. Those cases differ very materially from the one at bar. In each of those cases there had been a partial performance of the contract, a part of the goods had been delivered and paid for, and, of course, the transactions were relieved from the operation of the statute.
Nor do we attach any importance to the fact that Holmes delivered sacks to the appellants in which to ship the flour. This was a matter for his own accommodation, and was not part payment.
In our opinion there was nothing in the transaction that took it out of the statute. There was therefore no error in directing the verdict. See Noakes v. Morey,
Judgment affirmed.