1 Wis. 141 | Wis. | 1853
By the Court,
This was an action of replevin, instituted before a justice of the peace in the county of Columbia, by Ira Warner, the de
From this judgment an appeal was taken to the County Court of Columbia county, and at the May term, 1852, of said court, the case was tried by a jury. It appeared in evidence, on the trial in the County Court, that an agreement was entered into, concerning this horse, on the 13th day of December, 1851, between Gaius E. La Monte and the defendant in error, which is thus described in the bill of exceptions : “ The agreement was on the part of La Monte to sell a black horse, with a star on the forehead, and one white hind foot, to Warner, on conditions prescribed in the contract, which were, that Warner was immediately to have possession of the horse, to keep and use until paid for, in pursuance of the provisions of the agreement, which were twenty-five dollars, in two weeks from the date of the agreement, the balance, or remaining fifteen dollars, by the fifteenth day of the next May. That upon the payment of the last sum, as mentioned in the agreement, the home was to become, absolutely, the property of Warner; and until so paid, the right of property was to remain in La Monte. That in the event of Warner failing to pay either of the sums, or any part thereof, as they shall become due, La Monte might reduce the horse to his own possession.” It further appeared in evidence, that on the 26th day of December, 1851, La Monte had the horse in his possession, and that he. afterwards sold him to the defendant, (the plaintiff in error,) who had the possession at the time of the commencement of this suit, to-wit: on the 17th day
Upon this evidence the plaintiff below rested his case, and thereupon the counsel for the defendant moved for a nonsuit, which motion was, by the court, denied. Witnesses were introduced and examined on the part of the defendant, and after argument, the case was submitted to the jury. The charge given by the court is not set forth in the bill of exceptions. A verdict was rendered in favor of the plaintiff’ Warner, and the defendant thereupon moved the court for a new trial, which was denied, and a judgment entered upon the verdict.
The only question presented here, is, whether there was error in the refusal of the court below to grant a nonsuit. It is apparent that the transaction between La Monte and Warner, upon which alone he (War
By tbe terms of tbe agreement “ tbe right of property” was “ to remain in La Monte” until tbe whole contract price should be paid, leaving only tbe right of possession to Warner, and this latter right, subject to be taken away upon default in payment. Now, in order to preserve this right of possession, it was incumbent on Warner, either to make tbe first payment in two weeks from tbe date of tbe agreement, or to make a tender of such payment. It is not insisted that any payment was made, and certainly, there is no proof of tender-. To constitute a vahd, legal tender, there must be an actual offer of tbe sum due, unless tbe actual production of tbe money be dispensed with by a refusal to accept or something equivalent thereto, and this offer must be an absolute one, not coupled with any condition. Vide 2 Stark on Ev. 778-9, amd oases there cited; 15. Wend. 637.
- We cannot see, therefore, that tbe right of possession remained with Warner, after tbe expiration of tbe time for tbe first payment. It matters not that be was deprived of bis possession by La Monte or any other person; if be desired to preserve bis right under tbe agreement, it was necessary, on bis part, to do what was to be done by bim — to make payment, or
The case of West vs. Bolton, 4 Verm. R. 558, is in point. In that case an agreement was made between the plaintiff and John Bolton, the father of the defendant, for the sale of a cow. The price of the cow was $18, of which sum West had, at sundry times made partial payments, amounting in all to $10, hut the sale was not to take effect vmtíl the cow should he paid for mfull, and Bolton “was to have his security upon the property in plaintiff’s hands until fully paid for.” The cow was delivered to West in 1826, and remained in his possession until the spring of 1830, when Bolton, being unable to get the balance, after frequent demands, directed his son, the defendant, to retake the cow, and afterwards sold her.
An action of trespass was instituted against the son, who justified, as the servant of his father.
Mr. Justice Williams, in giving the opinion of the court, says : “ The testimony shows, most unequivocally, that the plaintiff had no property in the cow for which the suit was brought; that the sale under which he claims was conditional; that the property was not to vest until paid for, and that it had not been paid for in full. The plaintiff having failed to fulfil the conditions, on the performance of which he was to have the property, all his claim at law was gone. Whether he had any equitable right is not here the matter in dispute. The owner might retake the property again, and divest the plaintiff of possession, and would not be guilty of any trespass in
The only distinction between this case and the one before ns is, that in the former there was a default in payment, upon demand, before the property was retaken, while in the case at bar, the property was taken from the possession of Warner before the time fixed for payment had arrived.
But we think that the neglect of Warner to perform the condition precedent in his case, regardless of the taking away of the horse, is equally fatal, as was the neglect of performance in the case which we have cited above.
It follows then, as a necessary consequence, that on the day of the commencement of this suit, the llth day of January, 1852, the plaintiff below (Warner,) had neither a right of property nor a right of possession.
It is very true, as urged by the counsel for the defendant in error, that “ no person can make a better title to property than he has himself,” but in the view which we take of this case, La Monte, when he sold to Hunter, had a good title, and at all events, on the day of the commencement of this suit, Warner had ceased to have any title whatever.
The case of Cross, et al. vs. Peters, 1 Greenleaf's R., 378, is distinguishable from the case at bar.
We hold that the'evidence produced by the plaintiff below did not entitle him to recover, and that it was the duty of the court to have sustained the motion for a nonsuit. For, if from the evidence submitted, there was no cause of action established, and it would have been the duty of the court to have set aside the verdict of the jury, in favor of the plaintiff) as being against the evidence, it certainly was the