10 Pa. Super. 463 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1899
Opinion by
The defendant in this issue was plaintiff in a judgment entered on November 18, 1889, against Asher Millhouse and, on December 24, 1889, caused an execution to issue on said judgment and a levy to be made on nine head of cattle, among other property, found in possession of Millhouse. Kendig claimed the cattle, and this feigned issue was framed to try the ques
The refusal of binding instructions in favor of defendant is the subject of the eighth specification of error, and in the view which we take of the questions involved is conclusive of the whole case. If the only question arising under the evidence
That retention of possession by a vendor of chattels is per se a fraud, as against creditors and subsequent bona fide purchasers without notice, has been maintained as a rule of policy for the prevention of fraud in an unbroken line of decisions from Clow v. Woods, 5 S. & R. 275, to the latest case upon the subject. Clow v. Woods established that, retention of possession was fraud in law wherever the subject of the transfer was capable of delivery, and no honest and fair reason could be assigned for the vendor not giving up and the vendee taking possession, and the mere convenience of the parties is not such reason. The rule has been considered and discussed in many later cases, and its force remains unabated. No doubts have arisen as to the soundness of the rule, but difficulties have been presented in its application to the facts in specific cases and in determining when the evidence of change of possession was such as to present a question of law for the court or of fact for the jury.
In the present ease there was nothing in the nature of the property or the uses to which it was intended to be devoted, nor was there anything in the relations of the parties which could excuse the absence of an actual delivery to the vendee and his failure to maintain an exclusive and continuing possession. The transaction was clearly within the operation of the well established rule. The delivery of the cattle to Kendig was intended to be only temporary, he agreed to keep the cattle at his place during the night after they were weighed at Millers-ville, which he did, and promptly the next morning returned them to the possession of Millhouse, in whose possession they remained until levied upon by the sheriff. Such a temporary change of possession for a single night, with the intention of returning the chattels to possession of the vendor, followed by an actual return the following day, cannot be regarded as meeting the requirements of the law in this respect. When the
And now, July 28, 1899, it is ordered and adjudged that the judgment of the court of common pleas of Lancaster county be reversed, and that judgment, as to the nine steers or fat cattle, be entered for the defendant in the issue, and that he recover his costs.