53 Ark. 196 | Ark. | 1890
On the 6th day of August, 1888, the appellee sued John J. and Sallie Duval on account for $400, and had an attachment levied on three car loads of lumber, which attachment was sustained against defendants and from which they have not appealed.
The appellant filed its interplea claiming the property attached, and the court sitting as a jury found that the property did not belong to appellant, but to John J. and SallieDuval, and dismissed the interplea; appellant excepted, filed a motion for a new trial, which was overruled, and he excepted and appealed. The motion for new trial is substantially that the circuit court erred in its findings of the facts and the application of the law.
The facts are that, in response to a letter from J. J. Duval asking the Hope Lumber Company if it could take the “whole cut” of his mill, the Hope Lumber Company sent Duval an order for lumber, specifying therein the dimensions of lumber it would take and the price it would pay for the same “F. O. B.,” which meant “free on board” of car. at Prescott, Duval to pay for the loading of the lumber o the cars at Prescott, and the Hope Lumber Company to paj the freight, and, when order was filled, to pay Duval one dol lar on each car for loading, Duval being authorized to drav on Hope Lumber Company for what money he might need The bills of lading for the three car loads of lumber wcr made in name of-J. J. Duval, and the cars were consigned t the Hope Lumber Company. The three car loads of lumb were consigned to the Hope Lumber Company to fill in part the order above mentioned. Duval was at the time indebted to the Hope Lumber Company for money advanced him on lumber. He had arranged with the laborers who loaded his lumber on cars that they could retain the bills of lading until their wages were paid.
The agent of the appellee, learning that the laborers had possession of three bills of lading, paid them twenty dollars, which they said Duval owed them, and they delivered the bills of lading to him, which he took with the writs of attachment in the case and immediately went to Hope and to the lumber yard of the Hope Lumber Company, where he found the three car loads of lumber, one of which had been unloaded, and the other two of which were being unloaded, and by his direction the sheriff levied the writs of attachment on the lumber. This was on the 6th day of August, 1888.
Mr. White, the bookkeeper of the Hope Lumber Company and authorized to represent the company, after learning what had been done, told the agent of appellee that he did not want any trouble, and afterwards said that they did not claim the lumber, and that, if appellee would be responsible to Duval, they would settle for it as soon as checked up, which would be the next day. The next day the Hope Lumber Company gave bond and retained the lumber.
The agent of appellee was notified by the sheriff on the same day of the giving of this bond. Appellee’s counsel contend that the Hope Lumber Company was not the purchaser of the lumber but a factor, and that, the laborers having possession of the bills of lading, the delivery of them to appellee for value carried the property in the goods covered thereby.
In our opinion the facts do not sustain this view of the case, but show on the contrary that the Hope Lumber Company was the purchaser of the lumber. The laborers had no title to the lumber, and if they might in any event have had lien upon it, that question is not involved here.
xhe evidence shows that, before the levy of the attachments> the lumber had been delivered to the Hope Lumber Company at its lumber yard at Hope, and one car of it unloaded, and the others were being unloaded. The delivery of the lumber on board the cars at Prescott upon the previous order of the Hope Lumber Company and the consignment of the cars to it at Hope was a delivery to that company. Burton & Townsend v. Baird & Bright, 44 Ark., 556; State v. Carl & Tobey, 43 Ark., 353; Benjamin on Sales, secs. 181, 693; Herron v. State, 51 Ark., 133.
It is also contended by counsel for appellee that appellant was estopped to claim the lumber, as against it, by the declaration of Mr. White, the secretary and representative of the Hope Lumber Company, that it did not claim the lumber, and would pay the sheriff or appellee for it, if appellee would be responsible to Duval.
The primary ground of this doctrine is, that it would be a fraud in a party to assert what his previous conduct had denied, when on the faith of that denial others have acted. Th clement of fraud is essential either in the intention of th party estopped, or in the effects of the evidence which he attempts to set up. And it would seem that to the enforcement of an estoppel of this character with respect to the title to property, such as will prevent a party from asserting his legal rights, and the effect of which will be to transfer the enjoyment of the property to another, the intention to deceive and mislead, or negligence so gross as to be culpable, should be clearly established. Wilson v. Roots, 10 N. E. Rep., 205; Earl v. Stevens, 57 Vt., 474; Guffey v. O’Reiley, 88 Mo., 418; and note to same in 57 Am. Rep., 429-33; see also, Conkey v. Hawthorne, 33 N. W. Rep., 435; Henderson v. McMahill, 39 N. W. Rep., 276; Almy v. Thurber, 99 N. Y., 407; Sturtevant v. Orser, 82 Am. Dec., 321.
In Howard v. Hudson, 2 Ellis & B., 1 (75 E. C. L.), Lord Campbell said, “Like the ancient estoppel this conclusion (estoppel in pais) shuts out the truth; and is odious and must be strictly made out. The party setting up such a bar to the reception of the truth, must show both that there was a willful intent to make him act on the faith of the representation and that he did so act.’’ Here the appellee fails in both.
For the want of testimony to support the findings of the circuit court, the judgment in this case is reversed, and the cause remanded.