153 Ill. 427 | Ill. | 1894
delivered the opinion of the court:
The proper construction of the contract under which Weaver & Treadway obtained the property levied on, must, of course, control the decision of this case. It is contended by appellants that it was a mere contract for consignment for sale on commission, while appellee insists that it was a contract of sale. We fully concur in the views on this question as expressed in the following , opinion of the Appellate Court, delivered by Mr. Justice Boggs:
“Whether the agreement was a consignment of goods for sale upon commission, or a sale of the goods, is the only question arising upon the record. In form, and according to the designation given it by the parties, the agreement was for the consignment of goods for sale. But we are concerned as to its real character, which is to be determined from considerations apart from its mere form, or the name applied to it, or to any act to be done under it. The purpose and intent of the parties, and the legal effeet, as to third parties, of what they agreed to do, may be best determined, from the transactions authorized, or contemplated to be performed, by force of the terms and conditions of their contract. Thus construed, and its provisions considered in the same consecutive order as the acts under it were to be performed, rather than in the order in which the provisions are incorporated in the agreement, we find, first, that Weaver & Treadway were to order goods from the manufacturing company; second, that the company should, if it desired to do so, fill the orders and ship the goods at prices fixed by it, and render regular bills of invoice therefor; third, that Weaver & Treadway were to execute and deliver their notes to the manufacturing company for the value of the goods as shown by the bills so rendered by the company; fourth, that the contract contained no provision empowering Weaver & Treadway to return the goods or articles so received from the company, in settlement, in whole or in part, of their notes.
“So far the transactions contemplated to be done differ in no material respect from ordinary sales of goods by one party to another. Nor do we think anything otherwise appearing in the contract operates to take the transactions agreed to be performed, out of the category of sales. The provision that Weaver & .Treadway should sell the.goods at retail"prices certainly has no such effect, for that is fairly in ordinary contemplation in all cases when retail dealers purchase goods to be by them again sold. The difference between the price paid or to be paid for goods, and the price obtained for them when sold at retail, constitutes the profits of the retailer, and was not transformed into a commission, upon the sale, because parties in this instance choose to give it that designation. Weaver & Treadway were required.by other terms of the contract to sell all articles for cash, or for the notes of the buyer, and to deliver the proceeds of each sale, whether cash or a npte of the bujmr, to the manufacturing company. This requirement, it is suggested, clearly establishes that the goods were held for sale upon commission. We think not. The proceeds of every sale made by the firm consisted, in part, of the profits made upon the sale, or ‘commission’ thereon. Commissions earned by sales of goods by agents or commission merchants belong to such agents or merchants, and, as such, are retained by them, and the net proceeds only remitted to the principal or consignor. Under this contract, however, all ‘commissions’ were to be delivered over to the principal, to be by it credited upon the notes of Weaver & Treadway given for the goods, ‘until the principal and interest of the notes are fully paid.’ The application of the proceeds of each sale as a payment upon these notes would, in effect, recompense the manufacturing company for the article sold, and pay an additional sum (the amount of the commission) upon the balance due it for other articles yet remaining to be sold. Thus Weaver & Treadway would, if we accept the contention of the manufacturing company, be constantly applying their earnings to the payments of notes given for goods which, according to such contention, they had not bought and did not own, but only had possession of as agents for the true owner. The continued application of the entire proceeds of all sales to the payment of the notes given by the firm might, and most likely would, result in fully discharging and paying the notes before all the articles for which the notes were given had been sold, yet according to the argument such unsold articles, though fully paid for, would remain the property of the manufacturing company. A constrhction leading to such absurdities cannot be adopted. The application of the proceeds of sales so provided for is consistent only with the view that Weaver & Treadway purchased the goods upon credit, granted upon condition that they would devote the entire proceeds of all" sales to the payment of the indebtedness created by such purchase,
“The requirement that Weaver & Treadway should keep the goods well housed and insured, is nothing beyond what is usual in cases where liens upon personal property are relied upon to secure the payment of money. Compliance therewith was equally important to the Peoria Manufacturing Company, whether it was the owner of the property, or merely held a lien upon it to secure the payment of the notes of Weaver & Treadway. This provision of the agreement is as fully consistent with the position that the goods had been sold and a lien for the purchase price reserved, as that the goods were held under consignment for sale upon commission.
“Authority is given the manufacturing company, by the contract, to require all goods remaining unsold at the expiration of the contract to be returned to it. Whether such return shall be made is, however, at its option. Unless the option be exercised by the company, Weaver & Treadway must retain the goods and be answerable upon their notes given to the company for them, and the manufacturing company could not exercise the option if the application of the proceeds of sales had, under the terms of the contract, discharged the notes given by the firm. If, at the date named as the time for the expiration of the contract, such notes were unpaid or partly unpaid, the articles covered by the agreement remaining unsold might, as between the parties, be demanded and taken by the manufacturing company. The agreement is silent as to the disposition to be made of any articles that might or should be so taken, yet no one will contend but that the law would require the manufacturing company to expose them for sale, for the purpose of raising a fund for the payment of the notes, or the unpaid balance of any notes, held against Weaver & Treadway, and the cost of sale, etc., and to sell as many of the articles so taken as might be found necessary for that purpose, and return any article or articles not necessary to be sold to Weaver & Treadway, as in other cases where liens upon personal property are enforced by seizure and sale. So it seems clear the authority given to take the property is in no material respect different from that possessed by mortgagees of chattel property.
“But one other clause of the contract remains to be considered. It empowers the manufacturing company to order the goods to be shipped to other points before the expiration of the contract, and may seem to give color to the claim that the goods were held for sale upon commission. It is manifest, however, that this power of control over the goods could not be exercised if the proceeds of the sales of articles received under the contract had been so applied, under its terms, as to discharge and pay the notes of the firm. The power existed only so long as the manufacturing company held unpaid notes of the,.firm. If payment of the notes operated to divest the manufacturing company of all power over the goods, it must, it seems, be clear that the power existed only as a means of securing the indebtedness evidenced by the notes.
“The conclusion seems inevitable that Weaver & Tread-way were invested with full title to the goods, subject to such control thereof or lien thereon as the instrument created in favor of the manufacturing company. As to execution creditors of the firm, the title of the firm was unaffected by these liens or rights of the manufacturing company, because our statute makes void as to such third parties such secret liens upon chattel property.
“The doctrines announced by our Supreme Court in the case of Chickering et al. v. Bastress, 130 Ill. 206, are applicable to the questions here discussed, and fully support the conclusion we have reached.”
It is insisted here that the opinion of this court in Lenz v. Harrison, 148 Ill. 598, which was not published when this case was submitted to the Appellate Court, is of controlling importance in the decision of this cause,— that that opinion “completely brings the present contract within the law of bailment.” We cannot so hold, A careful comparison of the two contracts will show marked differences between them in the respect mentioned. In the first place, there is no provision of controlling importance in the contract involved in Lenz v. Harrison that gives to it a character different from that which it plainly, on its face, purports to be, viz., a contract of agency. Its different features, and the distinctions between it and a conditional sale, are pointed out in the opinion in that case and need not be repeated here. But it will be observed that the contract involved in the case at bar provides for the creation of an indebtedness of Weaver & Hutchins to the Peoria Manufacturing Company, and the giving of their notes therefor, for the price of the goods, as delivered by the company to them. It is true, the contract-provides that such notes “are not to be, in any case or sense, any settlement for said goods,” but the clear import of the contract, though not expressed in words, when interpreted in accordance with legal principles or the common understanding of men, is, that when the notes should be paid it was intended the title should pass. The contract did not contemplate that the notes to be taken by Weaver & Hutchins from their customers, for the goods retailed, though payable to the company, should constitute the indebtedness to the company for the price it was to receive, but a security, merely, for the payment of the notes of Weaver & Hutchins given for their indebtedness to the company. The proceeds of those notes, as well as all cash received by Weaver & Hutchins on their sales, and which, interpret the contract as we may, contained their commissions or profits, were by the contract to be credited on their notes until principal and interest should be covered in full. The contract clearly contemplates an indebtedness of Weaver & Hutchins to the company for the price of the goods as billed to them, and provides for its payment, and undertakes to secure such payment, not only by applying all proceeds of their sales, but by reserving the right to have returned all goods unsold at the termination of the contract.
We think no one can impartially read this contract in the light of the law as established in this State, where the rights of execution creditors are involved, as here, without concluding that it is one of sale, and not of bailment. It must follow that the property was subject to the execution of the judgment creditors of Weaver & Treadway which had been levied upon it.
The judgments of the Appellate and circuit courts will accordingly be affirmed.
judgment affirmed.