50 Iowa 174 | Iowa | 1878
To entitle the plaintiff to recover there must have been either ■an actual change of possession, or the levy must have been made with knowledge on the part of the defendant of the plaintiff’s purchase. There was no finding as to notice, but there was .a finding that the corn was delivered to the plaintiff. This finding is assigned as error. The word delivery varies in meaning somewhat according to the circumstances under which it is used. Benjamin on Sales, § 675. But the court must have used it in this case to denote actual change of possession, because anything less than that would, under the statute, be insufficient for the plaintiff’s protection. We have only to inquire, then, what is meant by actual possession as those words are used in the statute. In determining their meaning it is obvious that we need not inquire what delivery or what change of possession is sufficient to pass title. Of ■course, if the title did not pass the plaintiff could not recover; but something more than- title is necessary under the statute to protect a vendee against a creditor of the vendor. It is claimed by the plaintiff that Hunt did not retain “actual possession” within the meaning of the words as used in the stat
\_In our opinion, when a person sells a field of corn standing upon his farm, and the vendee does not commence to harvest it, nor otherwise visibly take charge of the corn or control of the field in which it stands, the actual possession is not changed within the meaning of the statute. The rules of construction require us to give force to the word actual. There is a clear implication that there might be a possession not actual, and that the transfer of such possession merely would be insufficient. Keeping in view this implication, and that the word actual must, if possible, be given some force of its own, we come to the conclusion that the possession contemplated is such that it is not changed by the mere, words of the parties, but by something being done calculated to impart notice of the change, j
We are confirmed in this view by considering the object which the statute was manifestly designed to secure. The statute provides for a record of the sale where the vendor retains actual possession. If there is an actual change of possession it obviates the necessity of a record, and conversely. Now the object of a record is to impart notice. The change of possession which would make a record unnecessary should be such as to impart notice. Certainly no good reason can be given why a change of possession would obviate the necessity of a record, unless it was sufficient to impart notice.
At common law there has been a conflict in the decisions as to whether the want of visible change of possession should
In Weeks v. Weed, 2 Aiken, 70; Flanagan v. Wood, 33 Vt., 337, it is held to be conclusive. But, whether the one rule or the other has been held, the possession in question has been the visible or apparent possession. The. actual possession contemplated in our statute, we think, is the same. In this connection see Lewis v. Swift, 54 Ill., 436; Hook v. Linderman, 64 Pa. St., 499; Miller v. Garman, 69 Pa. St., 134. In our opinion the court below erred in holding the delivery in this ease, as against the defendant, sufficient to entitle the plaintiff to recover.
Reversed.