158 F. 588 | 5th Cir. | 1908
The respondent represents the Cull-man Fruit & Produce Association, a private corporation, adjudged bankrupt. The bankrupt is an Alabama corporation, its plant and place of business being at Cullman in that state. Among other general purposes of the corporation, its business was to purchase, ship, and sell fruits and produce. E. A. Fealy was general manager of the association, and, as such manager, authorized and required to attend to all the business of the association. The proof shows that he claimed to have, under the by-laws, power to carry on all kinds of business in which the corporation engaged, and that he was the largest stockholder in the concern, and virtually owned the business. The Sprague Canning Machinery Company, the petitioner, is a corporation organized under the laws of Illinois. Its principal business is the manufacture and sale of canning machinery, embracing machinery for the canning of fruit and vegetables. On May 14, 1906, using the forms adopted by it, it entered an order on behalf of the bankrupt corporation for certain machinery, specified in the order, with this stipulation:
“All tbe above goods for delivery f. o. b. cars Hoopston, Ill., June 1, 1906, for the sum of $1>£>00.00 cask; settlement to be made by your payment of our ten days’ sight draft made at tbe time of shipment with bill of lading attached.”
The machinery was shipped June 6th with draft attached to the bill of lading. On June 21st, R. A. Fealy, manager of the Cullman Association, wrote the petitioner: “We do not care to pay exchange on drafts, and if you will release draft we will send check for amount due on machinery and on J une 26th sent petitioner a telegram in these words: “Release car. Will send check.” Acting on the promise to send the check, the petitioner instructed the railroad to let the Cullman Association havre the goods, which the railroad did. The check was not sent, and no money was then or ever afterwards paid on the goods.
On August 1st, H. O. Crane, treasurer of the petitioner company, went in person to Cullman, Ala., and saw Mr. Fealy, president and manager of the Cullman Association, and demanded the machinery or the money, which had been promised for it, when Mr. Fealy acknowledged that the machinery belonged to the petitioner company, but explained that they were just beginning to put up their goods; that he had not the money then, but would have it in a few days; and such
It is contended for the respondent that the transactions had on and prior to the 1st of August, 1906, vested the absolute title to the machinery in the Cullman Association, and that there can be no reclamation of it by the petitioner under the lease or conditional sale contract executed the 7th of September, 1906, for the reason that the title having vested absolutely in the Cullman Association the lease bearing date of September 7th could have no force for reinvesting the title in the Sprague Company, because it does not purport to be, and is not in fact, an instrument seeking to convey the title from the Cullman Association to the Sprague Company, and if the lease or conditional sale contract were an instrument purporting and seeking to convey the title of the Cullman Association to the Sprague Company, it could not be effective, because not executed by authority of the corporation. We concur with the learned District Judge in the opening sentence of the opinion he delivered in this case that “the first question which confronts us, and indeed the controlling and decisive question is, did the title to the property in fact and in law ever pass from the Sprague Canning Machinery Company into the Cullman Fruit & Produce Association?” And we also concur in the contention urged by counsel for the petitioner, as stated by the learned judge, “that the whole transaction from start to' finish shows an intention not to part with the ti-
“Then, if that lease should be construed as a valid lien upon the property of the bankrupt, it would not now at this time be necessary for this court to pass upon the effects of that lien in its relation to the mortgage given to secure the payment of the bonds.”
The learned judge also says that “at the time of the acceptance of these vouchers and bonds by the Sprague Company the property was in the possession of the Cullman Association at Cullman, Alabama, and was in use as a part of its canning factory, being attached to the building by pipes.” We have carefully examined the proof bearing upon the matter of the attachment of the Sprague machinery to the other plant of the Cullman Company, and we are clear in our conclusion that the connection made was not such as to complicate or affect, in any respect, the question of the ownership, as between the Sprague Company and the Cullman Association, of the canning machinery here claimed.
We concur with the learned District Judge that “there is no doubt about the proposition that, where personalty is sold for cash on delivery, the payment stipulated for is a condition precedent, and, unless complied, the seller may reclaim the property.” We think it is settled law that “ ‘where the buyer is by the contract bound to do anything as a condition, either precedent or concurrent, on which the passing of the property depends, .the property will not pass until the condition be fulfilled, even though the goods may have been actually delivered into the possession of the buyer.’ Benjamin on Sales (3d Ed.) § 320.” And it has been held by controlling authority that, where goods were sold to be paid for in cash or securities on delivery, “the sales were conditional only, and that the vendors were entitled to retake the goods, even after delivery, if the condition was not performed, the delivery being considered as conditional.” “Where no fraud is intended, but the honest purpose of the parties is that the vendee shall not have the ownership of the goods until he has paid for them, there is no general principle of law to prevent their purpose from having effect.” Harkness v. Russell, 118 U. S. 667, 7 Sup. Ct. 51, 30 L. Ed. 285. We quote further from the same opinion:
“Wbatever the law may be with regard to a bona fide purchaser from the vendee in a conditional sale, there is a circumstance in the present case which*592 makes It clear of all difficulty. The appellant in the present case was not a bona fide purchaser without notice. The court below find that at the time of and prior to the sale he knew the purchase price of the property had not been paid, and that Russell & Co. claimed title thereto until such payment was made. Under such circumstances, it is almost the unanimous opinion of all the courts that he cannot hold the property as against the true owner. * * * It is only necessary to add that there is nothing either in the statute or adjudged law of Idaho to prevent, in this case, the operation of the general rule, which we consider to be established by overwhelming authority, namely, that in the absence of fraud, an agreement for a conditional sale is good and valid, as well against third persons as against the parties to the transaction; and the further rule that a bailee of personal property'cannot convey the title, or subject it to execution for his own debts, until the condition on which the agreement to sell was made has been performed.” 118 U. S. 681, 7 Sup. Ct. 60 (30 L. Ed. 285).
From the 6th of June, when these goods were shipped, to the 7th of September, when the writing called “lease contract” passed between the parties, a period of only three months, there is not an instant when the parties came in sight that the Sprague Company is not claiming title to this property, and that the president and manager of the Cullman Association is not fully and clearly recognizing the Sprague Company’s title thereto. The shipment was made at the beginning of the canning season, the original conditional delivery was made upon a misrepresentation, not, indeed, constituting a moral fraud, but to give the delivery the effect of waiving the condition precedent would, under the circumstances, work a legal fraud on the seller. The conditions were substantially the same the 1st of August, and the claim of title and property continued to be clearly asserted on the one part, and as clearly recognized on the other; and under circumstances and conditions which operated no fraud upon anybody, and especially no fraud upon the purchaser, it was allowed temporarily to use the machinery on the promise and in the expectation of its being able to pay the price within a month, and on the constantly expressed readiness to always acknowledge, and to give any written evidence that might be desired of the fact, that the machinery remained the property of the Sprague Company until it was paid for. ■ The taking of the orders on the company’s treasury — call them vouchers or drafts, or what you will —and of bonds of the company as collateral security, worked no imposition on the Cullman Association, and had in fact no element of waiver of the condition precedent and concurrent, so far as that company was or could be affected by it; and then as to the writing that was executed the 7th day of September, whether we call it a lease or an instrument of conditional sale, whether it was executed or accepted by the president and manager of the Cullman Association, with or without specific authority from the board of directors to execute or accept a lease, it does assume, and, to our minds, conclusively shows that, at that date and between the parties, the fact was clearly recognized, that this canning machinery belonged to the Sprague Company, and was to so belong to it until the price was paid in a specified time, and that if default was made in the payment that company had the right to remove the property. The Cullman Association cannot question the. president and manager’s authority to act in these matters as he did, and at the samé time claim title to the property on account of the trans-.
We conclude that the court of bankruptcy erred in dismissing petitioner’s claim, and, in the exercise of our power to superintendent and revise, we reverse the action of the District Court, and here enter our order requiring and commanding respondent, as trustee or receiver, to surrender the possession of the property described to the petitioner, adjudging the costs against the estate of the bankrupt.
SHELBY, Circuit Judge, took no part in the decision of this case.