192 F. 47 | D. Mass. | 1911
The bankrupt’s property passed to the trustee as it stood on January 13, 1911, under the adjudication made January 30, 1911, upon the involuntary petition in this case, filed January 13th. The Atterbury motor truck here in question was on January 13th at a garage owned or controlled by the Dodge Motor Vehicle Company in Boston, and was under attachment as the bankrupt’s property in a suit' brought against it by the Dodge Motor Vehicle Company for storage, charges and supplies; the motor truck having been prior to said attachment used by the bankrupt in its business and kept by it at the garage referred to.
A receiver appointed by the court on January 13, 1911, filed a petition January 31, 1911, setting forth that Walter G. Robbins, the present petitioner for review, had made claim to the motor truck, had notified the Dodge Company that it belonged to him, and was proposing, after settling the pending suit brought by that company, to remove the motor truck as his own property. A restraining order was prayed for and issued. On March 10th, while it was in force, Robbins filed the petition which has been dismissed, asking for the release of the truck to him. The hearing, before the referee and here, has been upon a statement of facts agreed by the parties and to be referred to in connection herewith. I find the facts as set forth in said statement.
The petitioner for review at an interview on December 5, 1910, in Buffalo, Neyv York, between him and his son Frederick R. Robbins, then representing the bankrupt as its treasurer and manager, paid $2,000 in cash for the truck, and received a bill of sale of it duly executed and delivered. The bankrupt received and used the money paid, and no one disputes thát the sale, as between the bankrupt and the petitioner, was effectual to pass title to the petitioner.
. The truck, however, was then- in Boston, the bankrupt was using it and keeping it .at the Dodge Company’s garage as above stated. It bore the bankrupt’s name painted on it in large letters. The petitioner allowed it to remain thus in the bankrupt’s possession and use. In the bill of sale which he held, the bankrupt agreed to deliver the truck to him wherever in the city of Boston he might direct within
Had there been no bankruptcy, the petitioner would be entitled to the truck upon release of the Dodge Company’s attachment. The Waite-Robbins Company, wdiich had sold the truck to him, could not have disputed his right to it.
No actual delivery is claimed to have been made. Symbolical delivery may answer the requirement, but the agreed -facts show nothing which can be regarded as delivery of that kind. Delivery of the bill of sale was not enough. Dempsey v. Gardner, supra. The bankrupt did not agree to hold or keep the truck for the petitioner. It agreed only that it would make the delivery which remained to be made, upon his order given within a time which expired before the bankruptcy. So far as the Dodge Company is to be regarded as the seller’s bailee, nothing having any tendency to make it the purchaser’s bailee instead is shown to have happened until after the bankruptcy.
It was argued that the purchaser is to be allowed a reasonable time after the sale in which to take possession. If, under any circumstances, it could be said that a purchaser voluntarily accepting a title incomplete for want of delivery has not taken all the risk due to the incomplete state of his title while that state continues, there are no such circumstances in this case. Thirty-eight days intervened between the sale and the bankruptcy, during which .the petitioner was no further from Boston than Chicago. 1 '
The referee’s order dismissing the petition is therefore approved and affirmed.