120 Mass. 290 | Mass. | 1876
This is an action of contract to recover the price of a quantity of leather, exceeding fifty dollars in value, alleged to have been sold by the plaintiffs to the defendant There was no memorandum in writing of the contract, and the purchaser did not give anything in earnest to bind the bargain or in part payment.
It appeared on the trial that the defendant on May 17, 1872, went to the plaintiffs’ store and agreed to purchase the leather at the price named, to be paid for by a satisfactory note.
On the thirty-first day of the same month, he again went to the plaintiffs’ store, examined the leather, had it weighed, marked with the initials of his name, and piled up by itself, to be taken away by him upon giving a satisfactory note for the price, or the payment of the price in money, but not otherwise. He never complied with the terms of the agreement. The plaintiffs refused to allow him to take the leather from their store without such compliance, claiming a lien upon it for the price due. It •remained in their store till November 9,1872, when it was burnt with the store. Upon this evidence the presiding justice of the Superior Court ruled that the leather had not been so accepted and received by the defendant as to take the contract out of che statute of frauds, and the plaintiff excepted to such ruling.
It should be kept in mind that the question is not whether, if a valid contract of sale upon the terms above named had been proved, the title in the property would have passed to the de
In the case at bar, there was no actual acceptance and receipt of the goods by the defendant. They were never in his possession or control, but remained in the possession and control of the plaintiffs, who refused to allow him to take them, claiming a lien for the price. If they had and asserted a lien as vendors, this is inconsistent with the delivery of possession and control, necessary to constitute an acceptance and receipt by the vendee. In Baldey v. Parker, 2 B. & C. 37, 44, Holroyd, J., says: “ Upon a sale of specific goods for a specific price, by parting with the possession the seller parts with his lien. The statute contemplates such a parting with the possession, and therefore, as long as the seller preserves his control over the goods, so as to retain his lien, he prevents the vendee from accepting and receiving them as his own within the meaning of the statute.” Benjamin on Sales, (Am. ed.) 151, and cases cited. Browne on St. of Frauds, § 317.
It is true there maybe cases in which the goods remain in the possession of the vendor, and yet may have been accepted and received by the vendee. But in such cases the vendor holds possession of the goods, not by virtue of his lien as vendor, but under some new contract by which the relations of the parties are changed. Cusack v. Robinson, 1 B. & S. 299, 308. Castle v. Sworder, 6 H. & N. 828. Dodsley v. Varley, 12 A. & E. 632.
In the case at bar, the vendors refused to permit the vendee to take possession or control of the goods but claimed and asserted
Exceptions overruled.