30 Wis. 81 | Wis. | 1872
A number of objections have been taken to tbe validity of tbe chattel mortgages upon which tbe plaintiff claimed to bold tbe logs in controversy. It is said that they do not contain a sufficient description of tbe mortgaged property to enable a third person to identify it; that they refer in part to after acquired property: that a portion of tbe logs embraced
It is very clear that the jury must have found under the instructions of the court that the logs were actually turned out
"We see no objection to this charge. Whether or not the sale was complete and the title passed from the McDonalds to the Mill Company, was made to turn upon the intention of the parties and the real conditions of the contract. If the contract was that by placing the logs on the shore, this was to be a delivery to the company, so as to pass the title and vest the property in the company, so that if the logs were destroyed after that time it would bear the loss, then, manifestly, the sale was complete and perfect. The subject of the sale was bulky, ponderous things, incapable of manual delivery. “ When goods are ponderous or bulky, or cannot conveniently be delivered manually, or when they are not in the personal custody of the vendor, the law does not require an actual delivery thereof, but only that they should be put under the absolute power of the vendee; or that his authority as owner should be formally acknowledged; or that some act should be done typical of a surrender of them on the one side, and of the acceptance of them on the other. The transferance of any article which is.a symbol or evidence of ownership, or the assertion of complete authority on the part of the vendee by acts consistent only with ownership, and assented to by the vendor, constitutes a sufficient construction of delivery.” Story on Sales, sec. 811. In this case, plainly, there could only be a constructive delivery of the logs. The parties might provide in their .contract that the title should pass as soon as they were delivered or placed on the bank. The court said it
Of course all that has been said as to what would be a good delivery of the logs to the Howard Mill Company is equally applicable to a delivery on the mortgages. Any formal act intended as a delivery would be sufficient. If the plaintiff and Daniel McDonald went along the shore where the logs were
On the trial the defendants ashed the court to give a great number of instructions as applicable to the evidence. The court refused to give these instructions except the one already alluded to. The instructions are not numbered and fill eight pages of solid printed matter. Ve shall only make a remark upon them. They seem to us to be unnecessarily prolix — sometimes stating essentially the same proposition in different ways — and they would have served to confuse the minds of the jury rather than to aid them in arriving at a correct verdict. For this reason we think the court properly declined to give them. We cannot be more specific in our remarks upon them on account of the manner they are presented in the record. We think all the law necessary to aid the jury in their deliberations was given by the court in its general charge. Nor do we see any objections to the instructions which were given at the request of the plaintiff. The two questions in the case, whether there was a delivery of the logs to the Howard Mill Company according to the contract made by the company with the McDonalds so1 as to pass the title; and if not, whether there was such a delivery to the plaintiff, were fairly submitted to the jury upon the evidence. The jury have found for the plaintiff upon both these questions.
By the Court— The judgment of the circuit court must be affirmed.