Hagins v. Combs

102 Ky. 165 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1897

JUDGE HAZELRIGG

delivered the opinion oe the court.

Appellants and appellees claimed to be the-owners of cer- / tain saw logs in Breathitt county, Ky., by purchase from the same original owner. Appellants insist they were the first purchasers, and the sole question in this case is whether the title passed to appellants under the state of facts presented in this record. The only material evidence bearing upon the issue is given by the appellant, D. F. Hagins, and is as follows:

. “I am one of the plaintiffs in this action. I bought the logs claimed by the plaintiffs in this action from H. D. Back for myself and B. M. Hagins. Had two trades with Back. Sold him some goods and a log wagon and he gave me his note. The note recites that he was to pay same in logs, delivered at Jackson. Said note reads as folloivs:

*167“ ‘$140. Jackson, Ky., December 18, 1893.

“ ‘One day after date I promise to pay to the order of B. M. -and F. Hagins one hundred and forty dollars, with interest at 8 per cent, until paid, value received. The above amount to be paid in logs at market price in the spring of 1894, delivered at Jackson. H. D. BACK.’

“Some time after this Loge Terrell- sued out an attachment against Back, and I went to Back and proposed to buy the logs. .This was in February, 1894. He agreed to sell the same to me and we made' the trade. The logs at that time were at the mouth of Roark’s branch of Quicksand,, about three miles above Jackson and down Quicksand, be-' low the mouth of said branch at Back’s house. I took possession of the logs and branded them with a large ‘0.’ r branded all the logs Back had at the mouth of said branch, and I gave him the branding hammer and he took it down to where the other logs were and had them branded. Under our trade and by the terms of same the logs were delivered into my possession and were to become our property and he, Back, was to run them to Jackson for me. We did not measure the logs, as it was raining, nor did we agree upon the price except in this way; I was to pay him for the logs the most that he could get. offered in money for them, delivered a*t Jackson, when measured.”

It is a well-settled principle of law that where there is a contract for the sale of personal property in a deliverable state, but the seller is bound to weigh, measure, test or do some other act or thing with reference to the property for the purpose of ascertaining the price, the property or title *168does not pass until such act or thing is done. But it is otherwise where nothing remains to be done by the seller, and it appears that the parties intended that the title to the property should pass immediately, and this is true, though it is subsequently to be weighed or measured in order to ascertain the total amount of the price.

We are of opinion that the title passed immediately upon the branding of the logs, and that this was the intention of the parties, and that the sale was then and there completed. It is insisted by appellees that the sale was not complete for the reason that, by the terms of the contract, the seller' (original owner) was to deliver the logs at Jackson, Ky., a point some distance from the place of sale, and this was a condition precedent. While it is true the seller was to deliver the logs at Jackson, yet we are of opinion that it was the intention of the parties that such delivery was to be made by the seller as the agent of the buyer.

Discussing this question, in the case of Terry y. Wheeler, 25 N. Y., 520, that court said: “Where the sale appears to be absolute and the identity of the thing fixed, * * * we can see no reason for the inference that the property remains in the seller merely because he agrees to transport it to a given place. * * * And in carrying it the seller acts as bailee of the buyer.”

“Symbolical delivery of a large number of logs landed on a stream, preparatory to driving, is sufficient delivery, even as against subsequent purchasers, where * * the vendee’s mark is put upon the logs as they are thus landed, although the vendor is bound by the contract of sale to deliver the logs at a specified place which is many miles below the landing.” (Bethel S. M. Co. v. Brown, 99 Am. Dec., 752.)

*169The following authorities support our view of this case: Standard Oil Co. v. Van Eten, 107 U. S., 325; Byles v. Collier, 54 Michigan, 1; Benjamin on Sales, Sec. 309 and notes.

The court erred in giving peremptory instructions for the appellees, and the judgment is reversed for proceedings consistent herewith.