269 Pa. 451 | Pa. | 1921
Opinion by
This case presents the determination of an issue on sheriff’s interpleader; the jury found for plaintiff, but the court below entered judgment for defendant n. o. v., and the present appeal followed.
It is not the usual case of a contest between an outside creditor and one claiming as a prior purchaser from the debtor of the former; on the contrary, both of the parties to this controversy are stockholders, and were
Of course, in reaching our determination, every inference of fact must be drawn for plaintiff and all doubts thereon resolved in his favor. When the evidence is thus looked at, the following stated facts might have been found by the jury; and, since they tend to sustain the verdict, we must assume they were so found:
Plaintiff purchased from the Lyndall Motor Truck Company certain automobile parts for $7,000; at this time defendant was a stockholder and officer of the truck company, and “knew all about [its] affairs” (as asserted by a witness for defendant, who was in a position to know); the corporation was then indebted to defendant, and afterwards confessed judgment in his favor; hut, prior to this confession of judgment, the transactions we are about to mention took place; when plaintiff made his purchase from the truck company, the property bought by him was in the sales headquarters of the latter, No. 222 N. 22d street, Philadelphia, and another near-by building, used by that corporation, No. 230 N. 22d street; plaintiff told A. C. Lyndall (who was then president of the truck company, and appears to have had general charge of its business) to move the property to No. 232 N. 22d street, a building which Lyndall informed plaintiff was under lease to him (Lyndall) personally, and which did not contain anything belonging to the truck company; the articles purchased by plaintiff were removed to the last-stated premises, and his name was written on many of them in chalk; the key to
In submitting the case, the trial judge said there was nothing fraudulent about plaintiff’s purchase from the truck company, so far as “an actual intent to do wrong is concerned,” but, at the same time, he charged that “the law construes certain facts to be fraud,” even when no qvil intent is present; and he left it to the jury to determine whether there had been a bona fide delivery of the property in question to plaintiff, also whether the latter had taken such possession thereof as the relation of the parties and the nature, use and situation of the property required, to indicate a change of ownership.
Since the jury determined the issues submitted to it in plaintiff’s favor and the evidence justifies the findings of fact as above recited, we see no warrant for the final judgment entered by the trial court in this case.
The question whether the sale to plaintiff was in good faith, or colorable, was also submitted to the jury; and, although the court below expresses the opinion that “the transaction was only a loan, with personal property as surety,” yet that tribunal, in deciding the case, accepted “the plaintiff’s theory of a sale,?’ but determined he had “failed to exercise that dominion over his property which the law requires.”
Plaintiff testified that, when he acquired the articles purchased by him, it was with the understanding that Lyndall would, from time to time, as he could, make sales thereof on the former’s account, and that in this way there was to be repaid to him, plaintiff, the amount he had expended, with six per cent interest; he was also given a certain amount of stock in the truck company, as a bonus — no doubt to induce his original purchase, although he says he was then told the stock had no value, which appears to have been the case. To facilitate the carrying out of the transaction between the parties (all details of which, it is fair to believe from the testimony, were known to defendant), it was necessary to keep the property close to Lyndall’s office, which was also the headquarters of the truck company; but, according to the evidence, — which the jury plainly credited, — such possession was taken by plaintiff as the character and situation of the articles in litigation and the relation of the parties demanded.
Discussion of the relevant rules of law, from Clow v. Woods, 5 S. & R. 277, to the more liberal views taken by the later cases, can be found in the following authorities: Goddard v. Weil, 165 Pa. 419, 422; McCullough v. Willey, 200 Pa. 168, 172; Riggs v. Bair, 213 Pa. 402, 407; Northrop v. Finn Construction Company, 260 Pa. 15, 20-22.
The record shows no motion in the court below for a new trial, and the sole assignment of error complains of the judgment n. o. v.