H. J. Allen & Bros. v. Melton

64 Tex. 218 | Tex. | 1885

Watts, J. Com. App.

Appellee’s only defense to the action was based upon an asserted sale of the lumber by Q-. A. Porter, the agent of appellants, to H. A. Porter. And upon a consideration of the evidence adduced, the court below found that such sale had been *219made as would vest the title to the particular lumber in H. A. Porter, and which by his sale passed to appellee.

This finding of the court is not supported by, but is against, the evidence. There was no delivery of the lumber to H. A. Porter; it had not been separated from the mass of lumber with which it was mixed. As said by Judge Story in his work on Sales, section 296:' “No sale is complete, so as to vest in the vendee an immediate right of property, so long as anything remains to be done between the buyer and seller in relation to the goods. The goods sold must be separated and identified by marks and numbers, so as to be completely distinguished from all other goods, or from the bulk or mass with which they happen to be mixed.”

And as was said in Cleveland v. Williams, 29 Tex., 211: “It is certainly correct, as laid down in the books, that where anything remains to be done by the seller, such as counting, weighing or measuring, the title does not pass, when either of these operations is necessary in order to separate the goods from a larger mass, of which they form a part.”

Here the proof shows not only a failure to separate the lumber in question from the mass with which it was mixed, and of which it formed a part, but also that the negotiations had between Gr. A. and H. A. Porter did not amount to a contract of sale. There was no understanding between them as to the particular quantity of lumber desired by H. A. Porter, nor the terms upon which it was to be sold. While the evidence shows that there were negotiations between them with respect to lumber, yet it also shows that no contract of sale had been concluded between them. Appellee knew, at the time he made the purported purchase, that G-. A. Porter held the lumber as the agent of appellants. And he also ought to have known that the lumber had not been delivered to H. A. Porter, for appellee separated and selected the lumber from the mass without the knowledge or consent of Gr. A. Porter.

As H. A. Porter had no title to the property, evidently appellee acquired none by his pretended purchase from him. Horne v. Chatham & Co., Tex. Court Reporter, p. 12.

Our conclusion is that the judgment ought to be reversed, and the supreme court should render such judgment as ought to have been rendered in the court below, viz., that appellants have and recover of appellee the sum of $61.Y4, with eight percent, per annum interest thereon from April 9, 1884, together with the costs of suit.

Revebsed and bendebed.

[Opinion adopted May 26, 1885.]

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