46 Mo. App. 581 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1891
The plaintiff, a corporation engaged in the wholesale boot and shoe business, at Kansas City, Missouri, brought this action of replevin to recover possession of a stock of boots and shoes taken from it by the defendant Bain, as sheriff, under a writ of attachment, , which had been sued out by defendant Hall, in a suit by Hall against one, J. W. Campion. The goods in controversy had been purchased by Campion from plaintiff, but being largely indebted to plaintiff for the goods, and unable to pay for them, Campion had, as plaintiff claims, transferred the goods to it in payment of his said indebtedness. And plaintiff claimed the ownership and possession of the goods, on the ground that it had accepted and received them back in satisfaction of the debt.
The defendant Hall also claimed that Campion was indebted to him for rent, and his attachment against Campion was levied under the following circumstances: There wasevidenceadducedtendingtoshowthat the plaintiffs sent their agent, C. P. Gray, to Trenton, Missouri, where Campion was engaged in business, with instructions to effect a settlement with him, and for that purpose he was given authority to take the goods
There was a trial, and judgment for defendants, plaintiff appealed. The plaintiff has assigned numerous errors ' on account of which it is claimed we must reverse the judgment. We shall notice these in the-order of their presentation.
I. The plaintiff contends that the trial court erred in permitting the following questions to be asked by defendants, and answered by the witness Bunn: “Q. State to the jury who had possession of the goods at the-time the writ of attachment was levied on them ? A. Mr. Campion was in possession of the goods in controversy at the time of the levy of the attachment.” It is-needless to say that this question called forth from the witness the expression of his opinion on a material and dominating issue in the. case. As to whether the plaintiff or Campion was in possession of the goods' at the time of the levy of the attachment, was a mixed question of law and fact upon which the opinion of the witness did not throw the least light. The general rule is that witnesses must state facts, not opinions, except in those cases where experts are allowed to state opinions. As it is said in Commonwealth v. Sturtevant, 117 Mass.
II. The plaintiff contends that the court erred in refusing the following instruction asked by it: “1. If the jury believe from the evidence that before the levy of the attachment one J. W. Campion being the owner and in possession of the goods in controversy, and being at the time indebted to the plaintiff in the sum of $1,968.38, or thereabouts, was requested by plaintiff’s agent to deliver to him for the plaintiff the goods in controversy in whole or part payment of his, said Campion’s, indebtedness to plaintiff, and that said Campion assented thereto and relinquished further control over said goods, and the agent of plaintiff accepted the same and had packed the said goods in boxes and had removed the same to a back room of said Campion's store before the levy of the attachment on said goods by the sheriff as the property of said Campion, then the jury are instructed that the plaintiff is entitled to the possession of said goods as against the said attachment, and your verdict should.be for the plaintiff.” This instruction was amended by the court
As to whether given facts in law constitute a “sale” or “delivery,” or both, of personal property, is oftentimes a question of much difficulty:
The court, in view of the evidence adduced, should have outlined to the jury what facts constituted a sale and delivery of the goods, and then left it to the jury to .say whether the evidence proved these facts. There was no instruction even giving,an abstract definition of the interpolated words. The instruction as modified •submitted to the jury a mixed question of law and fact for their determination. This was improper. Speaks v. Dry-Goods Co., 22 Mo. App. 122; Estes v. Fry, 22 Mo. App. 80; Turner v. Railroad, 76 Mo. 261; Fugate v. Carter, 6 Mo. 267; Hickey v. Ryan, 15 Mo. 63; State v. Mitchell, 98 Mo. 657. The instruction as asked presented an intelligent and proper rule for the guidance of the jury, and should have been given.
III. The plaintiff’s second instruction was but a repetition of the first, and was properly refused for that reason. •
IV. It is further contended that the court erred in refusing the following instruction asked by plaintiff: “3. If the jury believe from the evidence that one Campion was justly indebted to plaintiff, and to satisfy such indebtedness turned over to plaintiff’s agent the stock of goods in controversy to apply on or satisfy plaintiff ’ s claim and relinquish all control as owner of said goods, then said Campion had lawful right to so turn over said goods and apply all of his property, if necessary, towards the satisfaction of said indebtedness to plaintiff, although such appropriation of his property may hinder, delay or defer other creditors, and the verdict must be for plaintiff although the plaintiff’s agent Gray and said Campion, or either of them, were
In this state the law is well settled that a debtor may give preference to a particular creditor or set of creditors by a direct payment or assignment, if he does so in paying his or their just demands, and not as a mere screen to secure the property to himself. The-right of a debtor to prefer one creditor over another necessarily implies the right of such creditor to accept such preference. While the effect of such preference must, to the extent that it is made, necessarily be to defer, hinder or delay other creditors, the-mere knowledge of the preferred creditor that such will be its effect, and the debtor intended it should have-that effect, will not be sufficient to avoid the transaction as to such preferred creditor. Shelley v. Boothe, 73 Mo. 74; Estes v. Fry, 22 Mo. App. 122. The evidence-was undisputed that Campion was justly indebted to-plaintiff in an amount as great or greater than the value-of the goods in controversy. Plaintiff’s good faith was not in the slightest degree impeached. It is nowhere-intimated that plaintiff, in purchasing the goods, did so-with the intent and design to assist Campion in defrauding his creditors. Its efforts were directed toward obtaining the goods in satisfaction of a just debt. Whether the goods were delivered by Campion to plaintiff’s agent for that purpose, or whether delivered at all, was a question of fact for the jury under appropriate instructions. Instruction, numbered 3, should have been given.
Y. The fourth instruction asked by plaintiff, to the effect that a bill of sale is not necessary to pass title to personal property, and that if Campion had, before the seizing by the sheriff, relinquished to the plaintiff’s agent, Gray, all control of the goods, with the understanding that the same should be applied to plaintiff’s claim against him, and that Gray accepted the goods
The jury should have been informed as to the effect of the bill of sale. It was executed after Campion is •claimed to have delivered the goods to plaintiff. The title to goods and chattels passes with the delivery of possession under a contract of purchase. A bill of sale subsequently executed is merely evidence of a transfer of title, and not necessary to its completion. The instruction should have been given. Gatzweiler v. Morgner, 51 Mo. 47.
VI. The plaintiff’s fifth instruction, while in the main it was a little more than a duplicate of its first, might have been properly given. If the jury found from the evidence the facts embraced in its hypothesis, no reason is perceived why plaintiff should not. have recovered.
VII. The plaintiff’s sixth instruction, which informed the jury that the assent of parties to an agreement need not be expressed, but may be implied from their language or from their conduct, or may be inferred from their silence in certain cases, and so, if the jury believe that Campion allowed Gray, the agent of plaintiff, to take charge of the goods in controversy without objection and to pack the same into boxes, and voluntarily assisted said Gray in so packing said goods, then the jury may find that the said Campion did in fact assent to the delivery of said goods to plaintiff, it seems to hs unexceptionable in its statement of the rule of law as applicable to the facts contained inif;s assumption.
VIII. The first instruction given for the defendants, which told the jury that the writ of attachment read in evidence and the seizure of the goods thereunder by defendant Bain was and is sufficient to entitle Mm to the possession thereof as against plaintiff, unless the jury belieye from a preponderance of the evidence that plaintiff was the owner of the goods, and entitled
IX. The defendant’s fourth instruction, of which complaint is made, told the jury, in effect, that, to constitute a valid sale and delivery of the goods as against the sheriff, Campion must have consented to reconvey the goods with intention to divest himself and reinvest the title in the plaintiff and must have intended to part with the goods and have actually parted with the possession, and with the intent to divest himself of the title, and the defendant must have accepted the same with the intention to make them its own. At the common law, the only things essential to a valid sale of personal property were a proper subject, a price, and the consent of the contracting, parties, and when these concurred the sale was complete and the title passed without anything more. 2 Black, Com. 447; Bloxon v. Sanders, 4 Barn. & Cress. 941. The exception to this rule is where the subject of the sale is part of a larger mass from which it must be separated by counting, weighing or measuring, or as goods to be hereafter procured and supplied to the buyer or to be manufactured for his use. Hence in a transaction in relation to a part of a mass a sale could not take effect as a present sale immediately
Although at common law, consent alone was sufficient to constitute a valid sale, the statute of frauds has now intervened, which must be observed. The statute begins where the common law stopped, and requires that the transaction, before considered complete so as to effect a change in ownership, “ shall be accompanied by a delivery in a reasonable time, regard being had to the situation of the property and be followed by an actual and continued change of the possession of the things sold.” R. S., sec. 5178. This instruction goes further than the statute of frauds. It denies to the vendor and the vendee the right to deliver the subject of the sale within a reasonable time after the transaction. As a definition of a valid sale and delivery it is too narrow and restricted. Under the statute the title may pass if the sale is accompanied by a delivery in a reasonable time. The sale and delivery need not be contemporaneous, although a sale in good faith may not have been accompanied with a delivery; it is valid until the expiration of. a reasonable time for such delivery. It becomes fraudulent and void as to creditors and subsequent bona fide purchasers only after the lapse of a reasonable time for the delivery. The instruction is, in view of the evidence in respect to the nature and situation of the goods and the transaction between Campion and plaintiff, improper and misleading, and should not have been given.
X. The defendant’s fifth instruction should have, as it did not, directed the jury, that if they found for the defendant, to assess the value of the goods at the time of the trial. The only evidence offered as to the value of the goods was what it was at the time of the caption. The evidence was received and the instruction given upon erroneous notion of the time at
It results from what has been said that the judgment of the circuit court will be reversed and the cause remanded.