American Nat. Bank of Nashville v. West

212 S.W.2d 683, 31 Tenn. App. 85, 4 A.L.R. 2d 314, 1948 Tenn. App. LEXIS 75
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMay 1, 1948
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 212 S.W.2d 683 (American Nat. Bank of Nashville v. West) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Nat. Bank of Nashville v. West, 212 S.W.2d 683, 31 Tenn. App. 85, 4 A.L.R. 2d 314, 1948 Tenn. App. LEXIS 75 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

PELTS, J.

The American National Bank, administrator of Mrs. Vera L. Cryer, deceased, sold her personal effects at auction. At this sale Mrs. Karen M. West bought among other things a .box of deceased’s old clothes for $9.50. She later found in a pocket of a bathrobe in this box two of deceased’s rings — a cameo of small value and a diamond of the value of $2,500.

The relatives and the administrator had made careful but unsuccessful searches for these rings; and no one knew, or had cause to suspect, that deceased had left them in the bathrobe pocket. On learning of their discovery the administrator demanded them as property of the *87 estate. Mrs. West refused to surrender them. The administrator filed a hill of replevin to recover them. In her answer Mrs. West claimed they had passed to her under the sale as part of the contents of the box of clothes.

The cause was heard before the Chancellor and a jury, defendant having demanded a jury. Several issues were tentatively submitted at the beginning of the trial, but at its conclusion the Chancellor submitted to the jury only one issue: “Was it or not the intention of the parties and one of the terms of sale of the box to Mrs. West, which box contained the rings in question, that the purchaser got title to all its contents, including said rings ? ’ ’

The jury were unable to agree and complainant moved the Chancellor to withdraw the issue and to enter a decree for complainant because the evidence raised no question of fact or issue for the jury. The Chancellor granted this motion, held there was no evidence of any intention of the parties the one to sell and the other to buy these rings, and entered a decree awarding recovery of them to complainant.

Mrs. West appealed, saved a bill of exceptions, and has assigned ten errors. All but one of them relate to her main insistence that the rings passed to her by the sale or at least that the evidence made the intention of the parties a question for the jury. That one presents her insistence that complainant by its conduct ratified the sale of the rings to her.

Besides the direct evidence as to the intention of the parties, there was a rather large amount of testimony as to the collateral circumstances. Mrs. Cryer was an elderly lady, had lived alone in a large house, and had *88 accumulated a large amount of household goods and personal effects. "When the administrator took charge its employees and her kin went through all of her belongings. Knowing she had these two rings, they looked for them wherever it seemed likely they might be found. While they did not find these rings, they did find some $4,000 in money in various places about the house.

After her house had been twice broken into the administrator, pursuant to an order of the county court, had all her belongings moved to a storage warehouse for safekeeping until the sale. The administrator employed an auctioneer and rented a vacant uptown storehouse in which to conduct the sale. All the property was brought to this house and was sorted and arranged by the auctioneer and his employees. All articles of any substantial value were set apart, with numbers pasted on them to be sold separately. Some of the things such as old clothes, etc., of only nominal value were put in boxes, things of like nature being put in each box, and each box given a number.

In conducting the sale the auctioneer offered each article or box separately, and when it was sold his clerk made a record of the number, the price, a brief description of the thing sold, and the name of the purchaser. The auction lasted three days, and Mrs. West attended and made a number of different purchases. She saw this box of clothing the day before it was offered for sale. It was a pasteboard box containing items of deceased’s personal clothing and nothing else except the rings which, unknown to everyone, had been secreted by deceased in the bathrobe pocket. The top of this box was open and a dress or coat was exposed to view. While Mrs. West said she did not look into this box, she did state that *89 prospective bidders looked into tlie boxes that were open “if they wanted to.”

If these rings conld have been found before the sale, the auctioneer would have sold them separately as he did other items of jewelry of deceased. When this box of clothing was offered for sale, the auctioneer held it up before the crowd and said: “Here is a box of clothes. What am I offered for it?” When it was knocked off to Mrs. West for $9.50, the clerk made a duplicate memorandum of the sale, keeping one copy and giving her the other. It stated the number, the price, and described the thing sold as “box clothing.” Mrs. West said she understood it was a box of clothing that she was buying, and she testified “I bought the box and contents, which was clothing.”

Thus the evidence shows without dispute that what the seller intended to sell, and what the buyer intended to buy, was this box of deceased’s clothing. It was their mutual intention that whatever answered to that description should pass to her by the sale; and the evidence affirmatively shows that neither party had any idea that these valuable rings might be secreted in this box of clothes, or any intention that they should pass by the sale. As to them there was no contract, no meeting of the minds, no sale.

A sale must rest on mutual assent of the parties as to all its terms, including the identity of the. thing sold. Where there is no consensus ad idem there can be no sale. So it is generally held that valuables secreted by a decedent in articles of pesonal property do not pass by the personal representative’s sale of such articles, but upon discovery are held by the purchaser as the property of the decedent’s estate. Huthmacher v. Har *90 ris, 38 Pa. 491, 80 Am. Dec. 502; Evans v. Barnett, 6 Pennewill, Del., 44, 63 A. 770; Bowen v. Sullivan, 62 Ind. 281, 30 Am. Rep. 172; Durfee v. Jones, 11 R. I. 588, 23 Am. Rep. 528; Livermore v. White, 74 Me. 452, 43 Am. Rep. 600; 46 Am. Jur., Sales, sec. 147, p. 325; Benjamin on Sales, 6th Ed., 78; 1 Mechem on Sales, sec. 273, p. 256.

To take the case out of this general rule, appellant relies on what she testified the auctioneer announced as the terms on which the sales would he made. We take her testimony as true, though much of it was contradicted by that of the auctioneer. She said that she did not recall that he made any announcement with reference to this particular box of clothes, but that at the beginning of the auction and from time to time during the three days it lasted, he did announce the terms which would govern all the sales that were made.

She testified that he announced that “ everything was to be sold and what you bought, there was no comeback on that, you were guaranteed nothing, of the contents or anything, except the title, after you buy it, it is yours ’ ’ ; that “it was an understood fact, that you would buy whatever was there and the title was yours; anything was yours, whatever you bought belonged to you”; that “whatever you bought in the box (referring to no box in particular but generally to all of them) it was yours, regardless of what was in there.

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Bluebook (online)
212 S.W.2d 683, 31 Tenn. App. 85, 4 A.L.R. 2d 314, 1948 Tenn. App. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-nat-bank-of-nashville-v-west-tennctapp-1948.