71 Me. 222 | Me. | 1880
The plaintiffs claim that the crate of crockery wrare, the unsold remainder of which they here replevy from the assignee of their vendees was only conditionally sold by them to Pope & Sibley, the defendant’s assignors — that there was an understanding between their selling agent and Pope & Sibley, that though the goods wrere delivered to go into Pope & Sibley’s store, and be disposed of by them in the ordinary course of retail trade, the property in them was not to pass until they were paid for. The making of any such arrangement was denied and the testimony is contradictory. If it were certain that the jury found that the plaintiff had failed to prove the existence of such an arrangement, the plaintiffs v'ould have no case.
But, as to the force and effect and legal consequences of such an arrangement, the "jury were instructed in substance among other things, that the position of the plaintiffs was that the title to the goods remained in the plaintiffs, and that Pope & Sibley had no legal title to sell any of them, and' could give no legal title to any of them to any purchaser — that there was no evidence that would warrant the conclusion that the plaintiffs constituted
As touching the real character of the transaction, the presiding judge put the following questions to the jury : "Was it one by which no title was to pass to Pope & Co., by which they were to have no legal right to sell the goods ? Or was it one understood between the parties to give to them a legal right to sell the goods in their business, as they had occasion from time to time, the plaintiffs undertaking to retain a lien for their security ?” And the jury were finally instructed in accordance with the whole tenor of what had gone before, that if they were "satisfied that no title was passed to Pope & Co. then the plaintiffs have aright to maintain this suit. If, however, such a title was passed to them as would authorize them to sell the property as their own as they had occasion in their business, and the plaintiffs merely undertook to retain a lien upon it then they did not do the business in such a way as to give them a legal right to retake the property.”
The jury must have understood that if the arrangement between the plaintiffs and Pope & Sibley was such that the latter could
In the latter case attention is called to the rule that in the case of a conditional sale, no property passes but subject to the condition ; and to the ancient maxim from Shepard’s Touchstone, "It is a general rule that when a man hath a thing he may condition with it as he will” We see ■ no legal objection to a wholesale dealer making a conditional sale to a retailer with the understanding that he may dispose of the goods as they may be called for at retail, but that as between themselves the property shall not pass until the goods are paid for; and in such case while the purchaser at retail would get a title which the original vendor could not impeach because of his agreement with the retailer, it would be the title of the original vendor and not that of the retailer who has none and can convey none except in the manner which his arrangement with the vendor permits. One to whom he sells his whole stock will take no title. Burbank, v. Crooker, 7 Gray, 158. Neither will his assignee in bankruptcy or insolvency.
The real question here was one for the jury. W as the conditional sale agreed upon between the plaintiffs’ agent and Pope? To find that it was, it was not necessary that the jury should also find that Pope & Sibley could give no legal title to any of the goods to any purchaser. If they could, it would not necessarily follow that they could give a legal title to the part remaining unsold to this defendant as their assignee.
Fxceptions sustained.