79 Ala. 545 | Ala. | 1885
The single question presented by the facts of this case is, on whom, by the terms of the contract, and the dealings between the parties, falls the loss of the mortiser? Generally, “the common law fixes the risk where the title resides.” The decisive inquiry is, in whom was the property at the time of its destruction by the burning of the depot in Birmingham, on the night of November 14th, 1884? The general rule may be conceded, that a contract of sale of personal property in the possession of the vendor is complete when the terms are agreed on, and there remains nothing for the seller to do, though possession may not be given, and the buyer may not be entitled to it until the price is paid. The property immediately passes to the vendee, and on him is cast the risk of loss, arising from any cause, other than the fault or negligence of the seller. The order of the defendant was to ship to Birmingham, at a named price, a mortiser of a designated manufacture, with the attachments. The selection of the particular mortiser to be shipped was left to the plaintiff. Until a specific machine, with the attachments, is selected from others of the same description, and unconditionally appropriated to the fulfillment of the contract, the sale is not executed, and no property passes. There is not the concurring assent of the contracting parties to the sale of specified property. The risk of loss of any one, or of all such machines in the possession of the plaintiff, prior to such selection and appropriation, rests on him. The order and its acceptance do not, by themselves, constitute a complete sale. Unless a particularized mortiser is agreed on, to which the contract attaches, the parties only intend an executory agreement. Block Bros. v. Maas & Block, 65 Ala. 211. But, even in such case, a selection and appropriation will not pass the property,
Did the subsequent selection and shipping of the specific mortiser and attachments operate to pass the title and ownership to the defendant before their loss, so as to cast on him the risk? If such is the operation, the plaintiff is entitled to recover; if not, the judgment rendered is correct. The question is one of intention, to be ascertained by the general rule established for the purpose of determining whether or not the property has passed. The plaintiff resided at Cleveland, Ohio, and the defendant at Birmingham, in this State. The negotiation was conducted by correspondence through the mail. 1 he price was to be paid on delivery. In contracts between parties residing at a distance from each other, sometimes the general property is considered as passing to the buyer, so as to make him liable for the payment of the price, and to impose upon him the risk of loss, while a special property is in the seller for his security in case of non-payment. — 1 Benj. on Sales, § 319. When the vendor appropriates the goods, and puts them in course of transportation, by delivery to a carrier designated by the buyer, or by shipping them as directed, consigned to him, but to be delivered on payment of the price, it may be regarded as proof of an intention to transfer the general property, and the mere retention of a vendor’s lien, — protection against the insolvency or default of the buyer.—Mer. Nat. Bank v. Bangs, 102 Mass. 291. The case of Pilgreen v. The State, 71 Ala. 368, falls within this class of contracts. The defendant, who was a dealer at Calera, was requested by the buyer to send him, at Columbiana, a half-gallon of whiskey, marked O. O. T). The Southern Express Company was the carrier selected by the buyer, and was his agent to receive the whiskey, and the agent of the seller to receive the price. It is said : “The general property, however, passed to the buyer by the delivery to the express company at Calera; the risk of loss then passed to him; though there may have remained in the seller a special property, and though the buyer could not, without payment of the price, entitle himself to the absolute property-, and to the actual possession.” The present case is not of this character.
While the plaintiff made selection and appropriation of the particular mortiser and attachments, and put them on board the cars, free of charge, in course of transportation to the place of destination, the bill of lading was taken from the railroad company in his own name, and the property was consigned to himself at Birmingham. A sight draft was drawn on the defendant, against the bill of lading attached, upon which is an indorsement, signed by plaintiff, as follows: “Freight Agent, at Birmingham, Ala., please deliver to bearer, on presentation,
This inference, arising from the bill of lading, is not rebutted by the stipulation of the contract, that the mortiser was to be put free on board. On a contract for the purchase of potatoes to be delivered free on board, part of the price paid in earnest of the bargain, and the balance in cash against bill of lading, where the potatoes were shipped in the purchaser’s own sacks, under a bill of lading which made them deliverable to the vendor’s order, it was held, that the retention by the vendor, in his agent’s hands, of the bill of lading in the form in which it was taken, was effectual to reserve the jus disponendi’, and that the right so reserved was not merely a vendor’s lien, but involved the right to dispose of the goods by sale or otherwise, so long, at least, as the buyer remained in default.—Ogg v. Shuter, 1 C. P. Div. 47; 1 Benj. on Sales, § 562. Conceding that the defendant was notified by letter of the shipment of the mortiser, such notice did not operate to transfer the property. The letter is not evidence of title, and did not authorize the defendant to receive the goods cousigned to the plaintiff.—Dows v. Nat. Ex. Bank, supra.
The draft for the price was drawn payable to the order of G. A. Garretson, cashier, and, with the bill of lading, taken and
There are no circumstances disclosed by the record to rebut the intention to retain ownership, evidenced by the bill of lading and the indorsement thereon. There is nothing in the evidence tending to show any other intent, and there was no inference to be submitted to the jury. On the evidence admitted, and if that excluded had been admitted, the court would have been justified in giving the affirmative charge in favor of the defendant. When such is the state of the case, erroneous rulings or instructions of the court will not work a reversal. Block v. Maas, supra.
Affirmed.