32 Conn. 405 | Conn. | 1865
In this case judgment must be advised for the defendant. In all its material features it is like the case of Crouch v. Carrier, 16 Conn., 505, as will be readily seen by comparing them.
First, it is analogous in respect to the ownership, use, and possession before the sale.
In this case, as in that, a son living in a part of the same house and working on the same farm with his father, purchased a pair of cattle and took them upon the farm, where they were kept and used in cultivating it until attached as the property of the son. Here the father was the lessee of the farm, and the son was in partnership with him in the business of butchering and worked with him in cultivating the farm. In Crouch v. Carrier both father and son were lessees of the farm, and worked it together when the cattle were purchased. In this case the son ceased to be a partner with his father or to work on the farm for a time, but returned to the latter employment before the cattle were attached. In Crouch v. Carrier the son ceased work with his father before the sale of the cattle and did not return to that employment before the attachment was made. There are thus some slight differences between the cases, but they are immaterial; for in both cases the cattle were purchased, taken upon the farm and kept there by the son, as his individual property, and the possession and control were retained by him. There was no bailment to the father, and his use was gratuitous and permissive, and without any possession or right of possession as against the son. In the material respects named therefore the cases are alike.
Second, they are analogous in respect to the sale, delivery and subsequent bailment.
In Crouch v. Carrier the father sold the cattle as agent of the son to an outsider and the purchaser permitted the father
And third, they are analogous in respect to the vice in the transactions which rendered them void in the law. That vice did not consist in a defective delivery, nor in the want of possession in the vendee as against the vendor, nor in the want of technical possession in the father as bailee of the purchaser and as between them, but in the fact that the property was, without legal excuse, so placed back into the same condition, and the same apparent relation to the son, that the actual possession was not visibly, apparently and continuedly changed from the son to the purchaser, so ap to indicate to the world that there had been a change of title. The purchasers in both cases permitted, and when they purchased intended to permit, the cattle to go back immediately or very soon, upon the same farm, and, as it was winter or spring, necessarily into the same stable or yard, to be thereafter kept and used by the same persons and in the same apparent manner as before, and there was to the view of the world no apparent change of ownership, “ no actual, visible and continued change of possession ” to indicate the change of title and bailment that had taken place. There was nothing in either case to create even a suspicion of change. The neighbors who had seen the cattle kept and used on the farm from the time when the son purchased and took them there as his own property, saw them afterwards kept and continued in the same place, in the same apparent manner, and used as his precisely
But if that case had never been decided we should on principle have come necessarily to the same result. The rule of law which requires a change of possession is one of policy. Its object is the prevention of fraud. It applies both to property attached and to property sold. In Wells v. Camp, 14 Conn., 219, it was well said of it by Judge Sherman:—“In this state it has justly been considered as wise and salutary, and it is rigidly applied except in ce'rtain cases where its application would be impossible or injurious.” The policy which dictates it and the prevention at which it aims, require its rigid application to every case where there has not been an actual, visible, and continued change of possession. It must-therefore be applied to cases like this. Where two persons are situated to the view of the world as the father and son were in this case, it is not consistent with the nature and purpose of the rule to permit a secret sale and delivery to an outsider by one, with the understanding that there shall be a bailment and delivery to the other, and a return of the property to the same apparent use and enjoyment. It would be a relaxation of the rule and open a door which it was intended to close, to hold such a bailment a legal excuse for a continuance of the apparent possession, and it would sanction a doctrine by which the rule could in a class of cases be evaded. No prudent officer would have ventured to attach these cattle and other property and leave them in the same yard or stable, merely bailing them to the father to be kept. Nor would any prudent purchaser have done it. The fact that the cattle were delivered and bailed up at Bristol, and kept for a day or two to make the sale valid, can make no difference. They might as well have been driven into the street by the purchaser and then returned. Indeed in the
The rule undoubtedly operates with hardship sometimes upon honest and wrell meaning men ;' but it can not on that account be relaxed. It is a rule, and must be maintained or abandoned. As the fault is not in the rule, but in those who disregard its just and salutary requirements, it must be maintained.
And as, in applying it, we must look beyond the good faith or the secret technical features of the transaction, so purchasers must learn and understand that if they purchase property and without a legal excuse permit the possession to remain in fact or apparently and visibly the same, or, if changed for a brief period, to be in fact or apparently and visibly restored, and thereafter in fact or apparently and visibly continued as before the sale, they hazard its loss by attachment for the debts of the vendor, as still, to the view of the world and in the eye of the law, as it looks to the rights of creditors and the prevention of fraud, his property. And if they desire as did this plaintiff, at one and the same time to buy the property of the nephew and bail it to the brother in law, they should look at the suspicious character of such a family transaction, and regarding the importance of conforming to a salutary rule of law by an actual and visible and continued change of possession, if both father and son are to remain on the place as before, exchange the cattle purchased and bail the new pair; or better still, let the son sell to whom he will, and the uncle purchase a different pair and bail them to the father. If it is true, as claimed, that the rule operates with hardship upon this plaintiff, it is because he did not exercise ordinary prudence in not conforming to it.
"We advise judgment for the defendant.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.