48 Mo. App. 521 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1892
This was an action of replevin to recover the possession of two cases of towels. The plaintiffs had judgment in the court below, and the defendant appealed. . For the purpose of a correct understanding of the question presented by the record for our decision, no statement of the casé need be made beyond the finding of facts made by the learned judge, who tried the case, which is as follows: “ The court,, sitting as a jury, finds "from the evidence: That plaintiffs sold the goods in controversy to Jacobs on credit; that they were shipped by plaintiffs to Jacobs to Kansas City; that they arrived at Kansas City and were delivered by the railroad company, over whose road they were brought to Kansas City, to the Yan Dyke Transfer Company, whose general business it was to carry goods to consignees, from railroad depots to the consignees, and that said company had a general order from Jacobs to deliver at their place of business in Kansas City any goods consigned to them; that, after a portion of said goods had been carried to the storehouse of the Yan Dyke Transfer Company, plaintiff’s agent notified a driver of a Yan Dyke transfer wagon, upon which some of the goods were on their way to the Yan Dyké Transfer Companyr’s storage house, not to deliver the goods to Jacobs, and that plaintiffs had exercised their right to stop the goods in the hands of the carrier; that after said goods were all in the storehouse of the Yan Dyke Transfer Company, and .before any sale of them to Iselin, Nesser & Co., and before any possession of them by Jacobs, other than the foregoing facts disclose, said transfer company was notified by plaintiffs’ agent of plaintiffs’ claim to stop them, and notified not to deliver them to Jacobs; that afterwards Jacobs sold to Iselin, Nesser & Co. and the Yan Dyke Transfer Company, who resold to Iselin, Nesser & Co., who received them from said transfer company; that after the sale to Jacobs plaintiffs learned of his insolvency; that at the commencement of this suit defendant was in
The precise question is, whether the plaintiff’s vendor’s lien or right of stoppage in transitu had been cut off or lost at the time of giving the notice by a previous delivery of the goods to the vendee. Stoppage in transitu is the right which arises to an unpaid vendor to resume the possession, with which he has parted, of goods sold upon a credit before they came into the possession of a- vendee who has become insolvent or pecuniarily embarrassed. In such case the vendor is allowed to countermand delivery before or at the place of destination, and to resume possession of the goods according to the equitable principles in the law of contract by which one party may withhold on the other’s becoming unable to give performance. It is an extension of the right of lien which, by the common law, the vendor has upon the goods ,for the price, originally allowed in equity and subsequently adopted as a rule of law. The right is said to be favored and encouraged by the courts of law for the reason that the goods of one man should not be applied in payment of another man’s debts. 2 Kent, Com. 540; 1 Pars. Cont. 595; Hutchinson on Carriers, sec. 409; Insler v. Lane, 57 N. H. 454.
The essential ground of the right of lien is possession; that of stoppage in transitu is non-delivery to the vendee. The title of the vendee is never entirely divested till the goods have come into possession of the vendee ; until then he may retract the intended delivery and stop the goods in transitu. The goods must be delivered to the vendee, and be in his actual and absolute possession; they need not, however, come to his corporeal touch; otherwise they may be stopped in transitu. 2 Benj. Sales, 106, 107; 2 Kent. Com. 544;
The defendants contend that when the goods in question arrived at the depot of the carrier at Kansas City, that that was as far as the impetus given them by the vendor would send them, and that they would stop them unless given a fresh impetus, and, consequently, the delivery of them by the railroad to the transfer company put an end to the transitus. In the Heinz case, just cited from 82 Mo., the goods were shipped to the vendees at Kansas City. When they arrived there the railroad’ company delivered them to the transfer company. This company had for a long time, under a general authority from the vendees for that purpose, received and hauled from the various railroads all of the goods shipped to them. One of the vendees, about the time ot the arrival of the goods, informed the transfer company of the fact, and requested it to hold the same as a security for the amount due by the vendees for advancements p.evionsly made by it in payment of freight on goods which it had received and transferred, to the vendees’ place of business. The trial court, by its instructions, had ignored the question whether the transit was at an end and the goods delivered. That is to say, whether the delivery by the carrier of the goods to the transfer company was such a delivery as put an end to the transit. For this reason the judgment was reversed.
The general rule is that the right of stoppage is gone when the goods fairly arrive at their destination, so as to give the vendee the actual and absolute posses-' sion of them. But his right is not lost by constructive delivery, if the delivery to a carrier or agent of the vendee be for the purpose of conveyance to the vendee. If, however, the goods be delivered to the carrier
Applying these rules to the facts of the case under ■consideration, and the conclusion is irresistible that the plaintiffs’ right of stoppage was still in existence when they gave the transfer company notice not to deliver the goods to their vendee. The transfer company received the goods under a previous general order, for the mere purpose of conveying them to the vendees’ place ■of business. They were not received beyond the mere ■duty or position of mere carrier for the vendee. There was no absolute actual possession of the goods delivered
According to the principles already alluded to, and which we think are applicable in this case, the judgment of the circuit court was authorized by the facts found by it, and should be affirmed.