63 Pa. Super. 27 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1916
Opinion by
' Plaintiff brought this action of replevin to recover certain sash. The contract on which the action was based provided that the plaintiff shall and will provide all material and perform all the work for the furnishing and setting in place all of the hollow metal window frames and sash,._____it being understood and agreed that Doak and Company is to set the frames in the wall, but this contract includes the hanging, fitting and setting of all sash and the applying of all hardware including the sash lifts and locks. The plaintiff was to be paid $7,500, eighty per cent, monthly of the value of the work done and material furnished and set in place under this contract during the previous month, as approved by the architect and received by the contractors. It had manufactured the sash and delivered the same at the building of the Finance Company. The statement further alleged that the contract was revoked by the defendant because of plaintiffs failure to employ union labor and notice of such revocation was given to the plaintiff, that Doak and Company failed and neglected to pay the plaintiff the sum of $1,200 which was due and owing to the plaintiff on October 1, 1914, for work and material furnished and set in place during the month of September, 1914, and that by reason of the said breach of the contract by Doak and Company, plaintiff was entitled to treat the contract as at an end and to remove its property, and it instituted this action of replevin to recover twenty-six pairs of these hollow steel window sash painted red and glazed. To this statement a demurrer
In an action of replevin, which is a possessory action, the plaintiff must clearly establish either a general or special property in the goods replevied and his right to possession, which right must be exclusive to- authorize a delivery of the property to him: Reinheimer v. Hemingway, 35 Pa. 432; Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railway Company v. Ellsey, 85 Pa. 283. In the case of an executory contract for the sale of personal property, requiring something to be done in order to ascertain the entire price, the property remains the property of the vendor until such acts be done and unless he delivered the property the vendee cannot recover the possession of it in replevin. To constitute delivery there must be an actual delivery at the place appointed, made with the intent to deliver, which intent is to be manifested by the acts and declarations of the vendor: Lester v. McDowell, 18 Pa. 91. Considering the nature and character of the contract, coupled with the acts of the parties as gathered from the statement, what was the intention of the plaintiff when .the sash were delivered to the defendant at the building at the Finance Company? It surely was not in the mind of the vendors that they would subsequently take them away, but they were placed there in compliance with their contract that they might be incorporated as a part of the building. This is recognized by the terms of payment when it speaks of paying for materials “received by the contractors.” If the plaintiff intended that the title to the sash, which forms but a part of the contract, was to remain in it, the contract should have so provided or something should have been done by the plaintiff clearly evidencing its intention to withhold the passing of the title. Its statement contains no such averment, but it does say that it is advised as a matter of law, that the title did not pass. It is quite evident no such thought was entertained by the vendor when the sash were left at the building nor under the
The demurrer should have been sustained. It is here done. The judgment is reversed and now; entered for the defendant on the demurrer.