3 S.D. 451 | S.D. | 1893
On July 12, 1890, the plaintiff and defendant entered into a written contract, by the terms of which the defendant agreed to deliver to the plaintiff 75 tons of hay on demand after October 1st for which the plaintiff agreed to pay him $225, $100 of which was to be paid by a buggy and harness to be delivered to defendant at the date of the execution of the contract. The buggy and harness were delivered for which the defendant gave a receipt, of which the following is a copy: “Sioux Falls, S. D., July 12, 1890. Received of L. B. Hull one buggy and harness, the same to be applied as payment of one hundred dollars
There are two sections of our Code which bear directly upon the questions in this case, which are as follows: Section 3629: “One who sells, or agrees to sell, personal property as his own, thereby warrants that he has a good and unincumbered title;” and section 3645: “The breach of a warranty entitles the buyer to re
The first question, therefore, is, did the transaction in this case constitute an executed sale? We are of the opinion that it did. While it is true the contract between the parties was not an executed contract, as the hay was not delivered, and the balance of the purchase price was not paid, the price of the buggy and harness was agreed upon, and it was delivered to the defendant, a receipt given for it as payment of $100 on the contract, and the title to it was absolutely transferred to the defendant. It was not an agreement for a sale, that required some further act to be performed on the part of one or both parties to perfect it, but it was a completed sale. The defendant was at liberty to dispose of the property in any manner he might deem proper. In case of the loss or destruction of the property the loss would be that of the. defendant. The transaction, therefore, constituted an unconditional, executed sale of the buggy and harness to the defendant. Section 3605, Comp. Laws. If, then, the sale was an executed sale, the defendant had no right to rescind it without the consent of the plaintiff. The implied warranty itself is not presumptively a condition. (Kiernan v. Rocheleau, 6 Bosw. 148; Voorhees v. Earl, supra; and in this case there was no evidence tending to prove
If the vendor fraudulently represents the property to be his own when he knows it belongs to a stranger, an action lies to recover damages therefor, though the real owner has not recovered the property, nor the vendee suffered any actual damages; and he would probably have a right to rescind for the fraud under the provisions of section 3589, Comp. Laws. Case v. Hall, supra. But in the case at bar no fraudulent representations were pleaded or proven on the trial, and hence the case presents only the question of an implied warranty of title which was incumbered by a chattel mortgage at the time the property was sold, but subsequently released before the vendee suffered any damage. The learned court below seems to have taken appellant’s view, that the trans