Where goods are sold, on condition of being paid for, on delivery, in cash or commercial paper, or on condition of receiving, on delivery, security for payment, an absolute and unconditional delivery of the goods by the vendor, without exacting, at the time of delivery, a performance of the condition, or attaching any other condition to the delivery, is a waiver of the condition of the sale, and a complete title passes to the purchaser, if there be no fraudulent contrivance on the part of the latter to obtain possession. Where there is a condition precedent attached to a contract of sale and delivery, the property does not vest in the vendee, on delivery, until he performs the condition, or the seller waives it. An absolute and unconditional delivery is regarded as a waiver of the condition. By an absolute delivery, without exacting the performance of the condition, the vendor is presumed to have abandoned the security he had provided for the payment of the purchase-money, and to have elected to trust to the personal security of the vendee. (2 Kent’s Com. 496-7;
Chapman
v.
Lathrop,
Justice Nelson, in
Furniss
v.
Hone
(
The learned judge who tried this cause was evidently mistaken in the proposition advanced by him, that, to make a delivery conditional, it must be declared to be so in express terms. Where the delivery is absolute, without any contemporaneous declaration qualifying it, the
*onus
^ie ProcJ condition rests upon the vendor. If no such proof be offered, the delivery will be deemed absolute, and the title to the goods will pass to the vendee. (
In the case now under review, the goods were sold on condition of being paid for (excepting $2000 worth), on delivery, by indorsed notes. The goods were delivered in parcels, at the purchaser’s store, on several days in January, February and March. There is no evidence to show that the delivery of any of these parcels was, in express terms, made subject to any condition. The delivery being shown, it belonged to the plaintiff to prove that it was conditional. No question can arise as to any of the parcels, except the one delivered on the 7th of March. Several parcels had been delivered previously to that day, without exacting the delivery of the indorsed notes stipulated in the contract; as to these parcels, the. delivery must be deemed to be absolute, and the condition regarded as waived. The memorandum indorsed on the receipt given for the goods delivered on the 7th of March, in which Lynes declares in substance, that on Wednesday or Thursday he will “have them ready” (which Lynes swears ^referred to the notes), tends to show a promise on the part of Lynes to procure the indorsed- notes and deliver them to the plaintiff, and that the goods delivered on the 7th of March, were delivered on the condition of the subsequent delivery by Lynes to the plaintiff of such notes. If the goods were delivered on the faith of that promise, and in expectation that it would be performed, this case resembles that of
Russell
v.
Minor
(
If the memorandum indorsed on the receipt of the 7th of March, tends to show a state of facts which will bring this case within the principle of the case of
Russell
v.
Minor
(which I think quite clear), the nonsuit of the plaintiff was erroneous, so far as relates to the goods delivered on the 7th of March; and the judge who tried the cause erred, in not submitting it to the jury, to determine whether the goods delivered on that day were delivered absolutely or conditionally; that is, whether the plaintiff intended to deliver them absolutely, and thereby to waive the condition on which the sale was made. (
There is no evidence in the case, to show that the goods found in the possession of Thompson & Co., and replevied by the sheriff, were a part of the goods delivered on the 7th of March. These goods they purchased from B. Lynes, without *any notice, for aught the case shows, of the nature of the contract of sale be-
tween him and the plaintiff. As to all the goods, therefore, purchased by Thompson & Co., from B. Lynes, and paid for by them, they are entitled to the protection of
bond fide
purchasers without notice, even if the delivery to Lynes was conditional. (
The nonsuit was, therefore, beyond all question, correct as to the defendants, Thompson, Schoomaker and and Dean, the members of the firm of Thompson & Co. But for the reasons before assigned, it was erroneous as to Benjamin Lynes. It must, therefore, be set aside, and the judgment of the superior court must be reversed.
Judgment reversed. 2
Notes
Miller
v.
Jones,
On a sale for cash, a delivery, -without payment, is presumptive evidence of a waiver of the condition; and the vendor cannot reclaim the goods from a
bond fide
pm chaser from the vendee. Leedom
v.
Philips,
