109 Kan. 146 | Kan. | 1921
'The opinion of the court was delivered by
The Kelly Milling Company purchased from Fred Gibson two wagonloads of wheat, paying him the
It is said that the question is of great practical importance to the mills and elevators in this state, and that millers and others engaged in buying grain cannot in the hurry of business make extended inquiry and trace back to its source every bushel of wheat offered to them in the-usual course of their business.
Markets overt were a Saxon institution engrafted on the common law of England. From that time a sale in market overt conferred a good title upon a bona fide buyer though the seller had no title whatsoever, and even though he had acquired the property by theft.
“All contracts for anything vendible, made in market overt shall be binding; and sales pass the property, though stolen, if it be an open and proper place for the kind of goods, there be an actual sale for valuable consideration, no notice of -wrongful possession, no collusion, parties able to contract, a contract originally and wholly in the market .overt, toll be paid, if requisite, by statute, and the contract be made between sun and sun.” (2 Bouv. L. Diet. [Rawle’s 3d-Rev.] 2096.)
By the English Sales of Goods Act of 1893, the common-law *rule is still in force.
In this country the exception in favor of sales in market overt has never been recognized because there are no such markets here. (Dame v. Baldwin, 8 Mass. 517.) The institution of markets overt has never been recognized in any of the United States nor received here any judicial sanction. (Ventress et al. v. Smith, 35 U. S. [10 Pet.] 161.)
The plaintiff concedes this, but contends that an exception to the general rule that no one can by sale transfer to another the right of ownership in a thing when he has no right of property, having been adopted in this country for the sake of commerce, in the cases of money, bank bills and negotiable paper payable to bearer or transferable by delivery in the due course of business (Murray v. Lardner, 69 U. S. [2 Wall.] 110; 24 R. C. L. 377), a similar exception should be recognized
The judgment is affirmed.