40 N.J.L. 581 | N.J. | 1878
The opinion of the court was delivered by
By the twentieth section of the act concerning executions, if any person shall purchase, in good faith, of a defendant in execution any goods or chattels, and pay for the same, prior to the levy of the execution, and without notice thereof, the title of such purchaser shall not be divested by the fact that such execution had been delivered. before such purchase was made. Rev., p. 393. This section was passed with a view to change the common law rule, that goods and chattels were bound by an execution from the time of its teste, and to qualify the provisions of the eighteenth section of the same act, which gave an execution force against goods and chattels only from the time of its delivery to the sheriff; but it clearly indicates the legislative policy of protecting the rights of bona fide purchasers from executions against the vendor, where it may be done consistently with the rules of law.' Delivery of the goods purchased is not essential to the protection of the purchaser’s rights. A purchase in good faith, without notice of the execution, and payment of the price, prior to actual levy, are the conditions under which his title is good.
The corn was purchased by Hurff and paid for in good faith before the execution was issued. It was lying in the bulk, unseparated, when the levy was made; and, after levy,
If the property had remained in bulk—the quantity purchased never having been separated from the mass—the purchaser might not have been able to maintain replevin, for the reason that in replevin the plaintiff must be the owner of the specific chattels he sues for, and must describe them in his writ. Scudder v. Worster, 11 Cush. 573. But that does not solve the question involved in this case. May not a party who has bought and paid for a specified quantity or number of articles from a larger mass, identical in kind and uniform in value, maintain trover against a third person who converts the whole, or defend in trover brought by an officer levying on the whole as the property of the vendor, when a separation of the quantity he was entitled to under his purchase has been made after levy, and possession thereof has been delivered to him ?
It is the general rule that the property in goods and chattels passes under the contract of sale according to the intention of the parties. The difficulty in the application of this rule is in determining under what circumstances the parties shall be considered as having evinced an intention that property in the subject matter of sale should pass from the vendor to the purchaser. The cases on this subject are quite numerous, and are not harmonious. Those which have been decided on the peculiar language of the statute of frauds have held a very stringent rule. Where the right of an unpaid vendor to retain the goods is involved, courts have laid hold of slight circumstances to retain in him the property until the purchase money be paid. Hanson v. Meyer, 6 East 614; Wallace v. Breeds, 13 East 522; Shepley v. Davis, 5 Taunt. 616; Busk v. Davis, 2 M. & S. 397; Swanwick v. Sothern, 9 A. & E.
The question whether the property has passed under a contract of sale, has generally arisen where the right of an unpaid veudor is in the issue. Payment of the price is so essential an ingredient of a sale that neither in law. nor in morals is the buyer entitled to have the goods until he pays for them. The lien of the vendor is waived where payment is to be made at a future day, or there has been a delivery actual, and in some cases merely constructive: hence the inclination of the courts to hold, on slight circumstances, that the contract is so incomplete that a transfer of title was not intended where the delivery is constructive only, and the insolvency of the buyer has intervened with the contract price unpaid. Prominent, also, among the cases in the same direction, are those in which the right of the purchaser to object to the quality of the article, which is the subject matter of the contract of sale, is involved. Here, also, there is an inclination to hold the title to be in abeyance, if any well grounded objection to quality is apparent. A contract for the delivery of goods, merely of a particular description, is necessarily executory; and where it relates to a certain quantity from a large bulk, not uniform in quality or value, the transaction is so incomplete that until selection, and not mere separation, is made, the rights of the parties respectively are undefined. In cases like those mentioned, it is considered, for substantial reasons, that the title does not pass immediately upon the terms of the contract being agreed on; not that these cases create exceptions to the rule that the property will pass by the contract, if such be the
The case under review is distinguished, by marked peculiarities, from those embraced in the foregoing classification. The contract of sale was not obnoxious to the statute of frauds. The price was paid, and, consequently, no right of a vendor to have the unpaid purchase money existed. Nothing .remained to be ascertained or adjusted, to determine what the rights of the parties were. The property Had been inspected and approved; it was left with the vendor for the purchaser’s convenience, and the mass from which quantity alone was to be separated, was identical in kind and uniform in value, so that the privilege of selection would not confer any advantage upon either party. Nothing was left undone by the parties, except measuring out the quantity purchased from any part of the whole bulk-—-a ministerial act which might be doue by either party, or by any stranger, as well as by the parties themselves.
The tendency of the modern decisions is to give effect to contracts of sale according to the intention of the parties, to a greater extent than is found in the older cases, and to engraft upon the rule that the property passes by the contract of sale, if such be the intention, fewer exceptions, and those only which are founded on substantial considerations affecting the interests of parties. At one time, it was held that, under an agreement to purchase an entire bulk at a specified price, the property did not pass if the whole amount of the purchase money depended upon an ascertainment by weight or measurement subsequently to be made. Hanson v. Meyer, 6 East 614. This decision was made in favor of an unpaid vendor, and was afterwards distinguished, on the ground that the weighing was to be done by the seller, and it was held that the property would pass if such was the intention of parties, though something was to be done, such as weighing, measuring, or testing the goods, to ascertain the contract price, if what remained to be done was -to be done by the buyer.
That the parties contemplated the corn should be measured before it left the vendor’s possession, will not, of itself, prevent the property passing. Nor will the fact that the vendor was required to deliver it when the time for delivery arrived, accomplish that result. Where the goods sold have been selected and designated, and the price paid, the property will pass by the contract of sale, though it was one of the terms of the contract that the vendor should transport them to a place named for delivery. Terry v. Wheeler, 25 N. Y. 520. The case, therefore, must stand exclusively on the fact that no separation of the quantity sold had been made from the entire bulk before the execution was levied, and the question is, whether there is a rule of law requiring, under the circumstances of this case, a separation of the quantity sold from the larger bulk, before title will pass to the purchaser, so positive in its sanction as to overrule the intention of the parties.
In my judgment, this principle should not be applied where the bulk, from which the quantity purchased is to be sej>arated, is uniform in kind and quality, and has been approved by the purchaser, and the full contract price has been paid. There is a clear and well settled legal distinction between the individual rights of several parties in goods of uniform kind and quality, and in those in which there is no uniformity in these respects. It is recognized in eases of a co-tenancy of personal property, readily divisible by weight or measurement, into portions absolutely alike in quality and value. In such cases, either tenant may take his proper proportion, and it will be regarded as a proper severance, so long as he does not take more than his share; but the rule is otherwise in case of property not severable in this manner: in that event, the partition must be by agreement, or proceedings in equity. Tripp v. Riley, 15 Barb. 333; Channon v. Lusk, 2 Lansing 211 ; Clark v. Griffith, 24 N. Y. 595 ; Freeman on Co-tenaney, § 252; 6 Am. Law Rev. 458. It is also recoguized in cases of the intermingling of the goods of several owners, where the whole is indistinguishable in quality and value. In Jackson v. Anderson, 4 Taunt. 24, one F., at Buenos Ayres, consigned to L. & Co. a barrel containing four thousand seven hundred and eighteen Spanish dollars, and advised the plaintiff that one thousand nine hundred and sixty-nine
There are authorities of great weight, that apply this doctrine to contracts of sale. In Whitehouse v. Frost, 12 East 614, the defendants, Dutton and Bancroft, were the owners of forty tuns of oil in the oil-house at Liverpool, of which they held the key. They sold ten of the forty tuns to Frost, who, in turn, sold the same to Townshend, who afterwards became bankrupt, and the plaintiffs were his assignees. The oil, at the time of the purchase by Townshend, and when he became bankrupt, was lying in the cistern, mixed with the other oil. The plaintiffs were, nevertheless, held entitled to maintain trover, though the oil had never been separated from the quantity in the cistern. In Woodley v. Coventry, 2 H. & C. 164, one Clarke had purchased of defendants, who were corn factors, three hundred and -fifty barrels of flour, of specified brands, and received from them a delivery order. Clarke sold three hundred and forty-eight barrels to the plaintiffs, and gave them a delivery order, which was accepted by the defendants. The defendants having afterwards refused to make delivery, the plaintiffs brought trover. The defendants had in their warehouse a much larger quantity of. flour of the specified brands, and there had been no separation or appropriation of any particular barrels to Clarke. It was objected, on behalf of the defendants, that as there had been no appropriation of any specific barrels of flour, no property passed from the defendants to Clarke, and therefore he could convey no property to the plaintiffs. The objection was overruled, and the plaintiffs had a verdict. In Gillett v. Hill, 2 C. & M. 530, the defendant, a wharfinger, accepted an order made by one of their customers, in favor of the plaintiffs, for twenty sacks of flour. In trover, it was contended that no specific sacks having been- selected and appropriated by the defendants, no property vested in the vendee, and trover was not maintainable. The court held the action was well brought. In Knights v. Wiffen, L. R., 5 Q. B. 660, the defendant having a quantity of barley in sacks, lying in his granary, sold eighty
These cases cited, it is true, were against defendants, who. were treated as mere custodians of the property, and the right to maintain the action was put on the ground of estoppel. The English courts make a distinction between this class of cases and actions directly between the vendor and purchaser. But, manifestly, this distinction is in semblance only, and not in substance. In each of the cases above cited, except Gillett v. Hill, the defendant was the original vendor, and no separation of the goods had been made as between him and his vendee, and the acceptance of a delivery order created no other contract than that in force between him and his vendee, to hold for the benefit of the sub-vendee a certain designated quantity of goods. Acceptance of the delivery order might estop a defendant from denying that he had that quantity of goods in his custody, subject to the order of the person sigm ing the delivery order. But if there be a rule of law which overrules the intentions of parties, and forbids property pass
While the English courts adhere to the rule that, as between vendor and purchaser, separation of the quantity sold from a larger bulk, identical in kind and quality, is necessary before the title will pass, how slight and unimportant a circumstance will .take the transaction out of the operation of the rule is shown by Aldridge v. Johnson, supra. There, the plaintiff bought of one E. one hundred out of two hundred quarters of barley, which plaintiff had seen in bulk and approved, and he paid part of the price. It was agreed that the plaintiff should send sacks for the barley, and that E. should fill the sacks and take them to a railway station to be forwarded to the plaintiff. The plaintiff sent sacks only for part of the barley. E. filled these but did not deliver them, and in a few days-he turned .the barley out of the sacks on the heap from which it was taken, so as to be indistinguishable from the rest of the heap, and became bankrupt. The plaintiff tendered to the assignee in bankruptcy the balance of the purchase money, and demanded the two hundred quarters of barley, and, on a refusal to deliver them, sued him in trover. It was held that he was entitled to recover for the portion put i'n the sacks by E., but for the residue he was without remedy. It did not appear in the case that the plaintiff, in fact, knew that a portion of the barley had been put in the sacks, and,
In the American courts the cases on this subject are quite conflicting. Many of them are cited and examined by Mr. Holmes in his notes to 2 Kent (12th ed.) 492, 590, and more particularly in his article in 6 Am. Law Review 450.
In Virginia, New York, Connecticut and Maine, the courts have held the broad doctrine, without qualification, that on a contract of sale of a certain quantity from a larger bulk, uniform in kind and quality, the property will pass, though there be no separation of the quantity sold, if such be the intention of parties, and that no rule of law will overrule such intention if it be otherwise clearly expressed. Pheasants v. Pendleton, 6 Randolph 473; Kimberly v. Patchin, 19 N. Y. 330; Russell v. Carrington, 42 N. Y. 118; Chapman v. Shepard, 39 Conn. 413; Waldron v. Chase, 37 Maine 414.
Kimberly v. Patchin is a leading case. It was there held that upon a sale of a specified quantity of grain, its separation from a mass indistinguishable in quality or value in which it was included, was not necessary to pass the title when the intention to do so was clearly manifested. But it is otherwise
The doctrine held in these cases, it seems to me, is founded on good sense and correct legal principles. The rule that the property in goods will pass by the contract of sale, if such be the intention of the parties, is of the utmost importance in the transaction of the business of the country, and it ought not to be qualified by exceptions and restrictions which do not arise from the substantial interests of the parties.
In this case the sale, in all material respects, was complete. The corn had been inspected and approved, and the price agreed on and paid. All these things had been done before the levy of the execution. The property had been left with the vendor for the purchaser’s convenience. Nothing was left undone but measuring out the designated quantity from a bulk identical in kind and value, and a delivery to the vendee. That was done after the levy, and before suit brought; and there is no pretence that it was unfairly done.
The defendant, by his purchase, and the payment of the price, acquired equitable rights that ought, if possible, to be protected; and it is the policy of the law to protect interests acquired for a valuable consideration in good faith, against the claims of execution creditors. In trover, property is involved only so far as determines the form of the action and the damages recoverable. The defence was a meritorious one, and no legal principle is in the way of permitting it to be made, if, in fact, the parties intended that the property should
For affirmance—None.
For reversal—The Chancellor, Dalrimple, Dephe, Dixon, Knapp, Reed, Dodd, Green, Lilly, Wales. 10.