92 N.J.L. 403 | N.J. | 1918
The opinion of tlie court was delivered by
The Ingersoll-Rand Company, the plaintiff below, sued to recover the value of certain machinery which it claimed was its property and was wrongly converted by the defendant to its use.
The record disclosed the following situation: Prondergasi & Clarkson had a contract with the United States government for the building of the Shoshone dam at Cody, Wyoming.
The trial judge, sitting at the Hudson Circuit without a jury, found for the defendant, and the plaintiff appeals.
We are of the opinion that the judgment must be affirmed. Of course, if we look only at the contract for the sale of this machinery (without regard to the specifications), there can be no doubt that the title passed to the purchaser upon delivery. The question which the case presents is, however,
But it is also the rule that where the specifications are referred to for a specific purpose only, they become a part of the contract for such purpose only, and should be treated as irrelevant for all other purposes. Short v. Van Dyke, 50 Minn. 286; Harvy v. Radkey, 1 Tex. App. Civ. Cas. 276; Noyes v. Butler, 98 Minn. 448; Guerini Stone Co. v. P. J. Carlin Construction Co., 240 U. S. 264; White v. McLaren (Mass.), 24 N. E. Rep. 911; Moreing v. Weber, 3 Cal. App. 11; Cruthers v. Donahoe (Conn.), 84 Atl. Rep. 322; Hayes v. Wagner, 113 Ill. App. 299; affirmed, 220 Ill. 256.
Tested by this rule, we think the reservation of title found in the “attached specifications” was no part of the contract.
The word “specifications,” when used in such a contract, ordinarily means a specific and detailed description of the thing' to be furnished or the work to bo done. The specifications in question were of that character. True they concluded with ihe statement that the title and right of possession to the compressor “remain in the Rand Drill Co. until the compressor has been fully paid for in cash.” But that is not a “specification” within the meaning of the term.
It is to be noted that the “attached specifications” were not in terms made a part of the contract and the only reference therein to them is in the clause describing the compressor as “of the size and dimensions as set forth in the attached specifications” No doubt they were thus referred to for the purpose only of fixing the size and dimensions of the compressor, and not for the puirpose of adding new terms to the contract by making it a conditional sale. This view is strengthened by the fact that the specifications used were evi
Since the contract in question was not a conditional bill of sale, and since the title passed to Prendergást & Clarkson under' common law principles, we are not concerned with the Wyoming statute respecting the recording of conditional bills of sale.
The judgment below will be affirmed, with costs.
For affirmance — The Chancellor, Chief Justice, Swayze, Trenchard, Parker, Bergen, Minturn, Kalisch, Black, White, Heppenheimer, Williams, Taylor, Gardner, JJ. 14.
For reversal — None.