44 Minn. 153 | Minn. | 1890
Action for _ the conversion of, 500 bushels of wheat. At the trial, after the plaintiff rested, the court dismissed the action. August 28, 1888, defendant contracted to sell and deliver to D. C. Moak & Co. four car-loads No. 1 hard wheat, the specific wheat not then being ascertained; but it was to be delivered in the future out of the mass of wheat in the defendant’s elevator. August 31st, Moak & Co. contracted to sell and deliver to Griffiths,
There was no express evidence whether the sale from defendant to D. C.'Moak & Co. was for cash or on time. It must be presumed to have been for cash on delivery.
There were some rulings of the court below excluding evidence offered by plaintiff assigned as errors; but as the evidence, had it been admitted, would not have materially varied the facts as we have stated them, it is unnecessary to consider those rulings, except one hereafter referred to.
Plaintiff claims that the case comes within the rule laid down in Cochran v. Stewart, 21 Minn. 435, that in case of the sale and delivery by the owner of personal property, although he may have been induced to make such sale and delivery by fraudulent acts and representations of the vendee, the latter may convey a good title to a
The case comes to the question, was there a delivery of the wheat? And, as it was a cash sale, payment of the price being a condition of the vendee’s right to a delivery, was there a waiver of that condition, so that the vendor, after what had been done towards a full manual delivery, could not repossess itself of the wheat ? For the giving of the check, there being no express»agreement that-it was, whether paid or not, to be a payment for the wheat, is to be regarded as taken in payment only in the event of its being paid on due presentation. As it was not so paid, it did not operate as payment.
There is no claim of any evidence of express waiver, or of any waiver except such as might be implied from the circumstances and the acts of the parties. To constitute a waiver, there must be, not only an act of delivery, but an intent not to insist on. immediate payment as a condition of the title passing.. Of course, an act of delivery which would pass the title upon a sale without condition might not have that consequence when the sale is conditional. Thus, upon an unconditional sale, a delivery “free on board” to the carrier of the purchaser, for transportation to him, would pass the title. But such would not be the effect of such a delivery where, by the contract of sale, the goods are to be paid for, or notes or security given, upon their arrival at their place of destination. Pond Machine
The ruling of the court below excluding evidence offered by appellant, which we have reserved for consideration, arose upon two offers to prove a long-established and general usage in the grain trade at Minneapolis. The offers were too long to be repeated verbatim here; but, stating the usage as the offers are epitomized in the appellant’s brief, it was, in substance, this: that when cars are loaded, consigned, transferred, and treated as the cars in this case were, the grain is regarded, from the moment the loading is completed, as the exclusive property, and in the exclusive possession and control, of the purchaser, salable by him, and purchasable by any other person, free from all rights and claims by the elevator company. The usage of which proof was so offered was only local. According to it, under the circumstances stated, the title was regarded, as having passed, whatever might be the agreement of the parties.
Judgment affirmed.