7 Fla. 329 | Fla. | 1857
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The facts of this case, as presented in the bill of excep
To maintain trover or replevin the plaintiff must have the right to the immediate possession of the chattel. Now cis between the vendor and vendee, there had been such a delivery of the lumber as entitled the latter to the immediate possession, and had he proceeded to appropriate it to his own use, he could not have been made liable in an action of trespass. It is true that there had been no actual delivery, by manucaption, but there had been as near an approach to an actual delivery as the nature of the property would admit of. There had been a contract of sale entered into between the vendor and vendee, accompanied by a transfer to the latter of the lumberman’s receipt. This was a symbolical delivery, and is as effectual in law, where the nature of the property requires it, as an actual delivery.— Thus it is held, that if the goods be in a ware-house, the delivery of the hey of the ware-house will be sufficient. Timber may be delivered by marking it with the initials of the assignee. (Williams on Personal Property, 34 Marginal.)
Upon this point Lord Kenyon has observed — “Where goods are ponderous and incapable of being handed over from one to another, there need not be an actual delivery, but it may be done by that which is tantamount, such as the delivery of the key of a ware-house in which the goods are lodged, or by delivery of other indicia of property.” (Chitty on Corat. 396.)
Taking a bill of parcels and the order on the warehouseman, and paying the price, has been held to be a complete and executed contract, so as to pass the property and the risk of the articles sold. Pleasants vs. Pendleton, 6 Rand. R. 473.
In the case before us there was a delivery to the vendee of the lumberman’s receipt, indorsed with the name of the owner and vendor ; and the objection alledged against this act being taken to be a sufficient delivery is, that the indorsement was in blank. Considering the nature of the business out of which this contract arose — the article sold being the subject of commercial speculation, and the mode of assignment well adapted to facilitate the transfer of the title where the property is liable to be passed from hand to hand, we are inclined to think that, under these circumstances, the blank endorsement is sufficient to indicate the intention of the vendor to part with his title to the property and his right of possession therein. But it is insisted that the title to Mitchell was not complete, in as much as by his contract with Herrington & Co., he was to pay for only so much of the lumber as he should actually receive from McLean the agent. We do not adopt this view of the contract. We think that as between Herrington and Mitchell the delivery was complete, and the stipulation respecting the quantity to be paid for, was only in the nature of an agreement on the part of Herrington & Co. to make an abatement for such quantity as Mitchell should fail to receive.
The facts of this case relieves us from the necessity of any attempt to solve the doubt suggested by this eminent J urist; for it is universally admitted that if the bailee, either expressly or impliedly signify his assent to the transfer, he makes himself the bailee of the purchaser, and there is thereby such a privity established between the parties, as will be sufficient to sustain any action between them. The evidence in this record clearly establishes the assent of McLean .to the sale and transfer from Herrington & Co. to Mitchell. The witness Herrington says — “McLean admitted to witness the whole amount of the lumber contained in the receipt to be in his possession, just before the sale to Mitchell, and promised witness to account to Mitchell for it, except two cargoes which had been sent to New Orleans, and agreed to deliver the remainder to Mitchell.” Now considering that the witness Herrington, was one of the original owners of the lumber who had sold it to Michel], it is difficult to resist the conclusion, that this promise and agreement on the part of McLean, amounted to such an assent to the transfer, as did constitute him the bailee of Mitchell, the purchaser. But to put the evidence of assent beyond all controversy, here we have the suit of McLean against Mitchell to recover the commissions and charges aliedged to be due upon the very lumber so sold and transferred. This proceeding of McLean operates as a complete estoppel'upon him, and establishes the fact most conclusively, that he not only recognized the sale and transfer of lum
In this view of the case, we are of the opinion that the defendant ought to have been permitted to éstablish by proof, as he sought to do, the amount of the deficiencies in the several lots of lumber, and the value of the same, and that it was error to prohibit him from the attempt to do so.
Let the judgment be reversed and the cause be remanded to the Court below, with directions to grant a new trial, and with permission to the parties to amend their plead-», ing.