Bissell v. . Balcom

39 N.Y. 275, 7 Trans. App. 212
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 5, 1868
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 39 N.Y. 275 (Bissell v. . Balcom) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bissell v. . Balcom, 39 N.Y. 275, 7 Trans. App. 212 (N.Y. 1868).

Opinion

Woodruff, J.

The jury have found, in this case, that the transaction between the Plaintiff and Defendant was not a mere executory contract to sell and deliver at a future day.

There was evidence to justify the submission of that question to the jury, and sufficient to sustain their finding. The Plaintiff’s testimony is in terms to an absolute sale. A complete meeting of the minds of the parties upon the fact of sale, and the price to be paid, and the right of the Defendant to take the cattle when he saw fit, and to this there is no contradiction. The Defendant’s *216 testimony on this point corroborates the Plaintiff. Nothing whatever remained to be done by either party to entitle the Defendant to claim the property, or the Plaintiff to demand the price at the expiration of the agreed credit. The Plaintiff did not even reserve his lien on the cattle for the price.

The Defendant was entitled to take away the cattle from time to time, as he might wish to butcher them, and without further leave or license from the Plaintiff. The Plaintiff was not even bound by the agreement to make a delivery; the Defendant was to come and get them.” This is several times reiterated in the testimony, and also in a more decisive form. “ If he wanted any of them ■ to butcher before the first of December, he was to come and take them.”

The parties declared their understanding of it at the time as an actual sale. The jury were warranted by the evidence in finding this; it is in direct accordance with uncontradicted testimony. This constituted a present sale of the property at the common law, by which title passed to the purchaser, and by which the vendor’s right to the purchase-money was perfect.

To the binding legal effect of such a sale, at the common law, delivery of the property is not necessary to vest the title in the purchaser, or to place the property at his risk; nor is it necessary that actual payment of any part of the price should be made. On the contrary, the sale may be perfect, the title pass, and the property be at the risk of the purchaser, and yet the vendor retain the possession, and have complete right to retain the possession, until the price is paid, and to compel payment before delivery.

Here the agreement went further: it waived all lien for the price, and left the cattle entirely at the pleasure of the purchaser, to take and kill whenever he saw fit. Upon this finding of the jury we are, therefore, to treat this transaction as a present absolute sale at the common law, by force of which the title of the cattle vested in the Defendant; the right of the Plaintiff to have the purchase-price at the expiration of the term of credit complete. And the cattle remained on the Plaintiff’s land, subject to the Defendant’s right to take them at his pleasure; but meantime to be at *217 his risk. The Judge submitted to the jury the further question, as an alternative to the other, viz., whether this transaction was a present sale and delivery of the cattle to the Defendant; and the jury have found that it was. They thus deny that it was an executory agreement for a future sale. They affirm that it was a present sale, and also that it was accompanied by a delivery of the cattle to the Defendant. The finding that it was an absolute sale was supported by the evidence, as 1 have shown. If the evidence of delivery "was such as would warrant the submission of the question of delivery to the jury, and would justify their finding that although the cattle remained for pasture on the land of the Plaintiff, he was to keep them as bailee of the Defendant, his subsequent directions from time to time to change their place of pasture indicating his acceptance thereof, then not only all the requisites to a complete sale at the common law were complied with, but the Statute of Frauds was fully satisfied.

The Court below, in setting aside the verdict, have not regarded this finding of the jury, that there was an actual delivery satisfying the requirements of the Statute of Frauds, as warranted by the evidence, and have held that the motion for a nonsuit should have been granted. The cattle were agreed to be at the Defendant’s disposal, with authority to take them at his pleasure. His directions as to the place where they should be pastured were given from time to time; and the Plaintiff submitted to his authority, and obeyed his instructions in the keeping of the cattle, and as to driving or placing them where he directed.

The argument is by no means trivial, that the acts of the Plaintiff in removing the cattle to the place designated by the Defendant, and the Defendant’s assumption of dominion over them by directing their removal, submitted to by the Plaintiff, warranted the jury in finding delivery and acceptance; that although the cattle remained upon the premises of the vendor, in his charge and keeping, yet that he no longer held them as owner, and had no control over them, except as bailee of the purchaser; that the character in which he held possession was changed; and therefore, as in Marvin v. Wallace (37 Eng. L. & Eq. R. 6), the jury were *218 justified in finding delivery and acceptance. In that case the sale of a horse was made, and without any actual delivery to the buyer, the vendor asked the buyer to lend the horse to him for use, for two or three weeks, and the buyer consented, and the horse was retained and used by the vendor accordingly. This was held to change the" character of the holding by the latter, and to amount to a delivery and acceptance; as also in Ehnore v. Stone (1 Taunt. 458), where, on an oral sale of two horses, the buyer requested the vendor to keep the horses at livery for him, to which the vendor consented, and thereupon removed the horses from his sales stables to another stable, where he kept horses at livery. This was held to amount to delivery and acceptance, under the Statute of Frauds.

But without pursuing this branch of the subject, or expressing any opinion thereon, there is another ground upon which the contract is valid under the Statute of Frauds, and entitled the Plaintiff to retain his verdict, and upon which the nonsuit was rightfully denied.

The sale was a present sale, valid at the common law. The Statute of Frauds requires, where the price of the property is fifty dollars, one of three requisites to a legal sale: 1st. That there shall be a note or memorandum in writing, subscribed, &e.; or, 2d. That the buyer accept and receive part of such goods, &c.; or, 3d. That the buyer shall at the time pay some part of the purchase-mon ey. ”

The motion for a nonsuit, and the order appealed from, proceed upon the ground that neither of these three requisites were complied with. There was no writing; that is certain. I do not deem it necessary to add anything to what I have said as to delivery and acceptance.

But upon the effect of the transactions of the day following the first oral treaty for the sale, particularly described by the witnesses, I think the decision of the Supreme Court was erroneous. The testimony stands uncontradicted, that on the day when the parties first met and orally agreed to the terms of sale, the Plaintiff was asked by the Defendant if he wanted any money to bind

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Forrester v. Hauser Construction Co.
240 P. 873 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1925)
Broom v. Joselson
211 A.D. 157 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1924)
Young v. . Ingalsbe
102 N.E. 590 (New York Court of Appeals, 1913)
Wheless v. Meyer-Schmid Grocer Co.
120 S.W. 708 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1909)
Longfellow v. Huffman
90 P. 907 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1907)
Koewing v. Wilder
128 F. 558 (Second Circuit, 1904)
Colton v. Raymond
114 F. 863 (Second Circuit, 1902)
Raymond v. Colton
104 F. 219 (Second Circuit, 1900)
Weir v. Hudnut
18 N.E. 24 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1888)
Brock v. O'Donnell
45 N.J.L. 441 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1883)
Hallenbeck v. Cochran
27 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 416 (New York Supreme Court, 1880)
Hawley v. . Keeler
53 N.Y. 114 (New York Court of Appeals, 1873)
Brown v. Hall
5 Lans. 177 (New York Supreme Court, 1871)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
39 N.Y. 275, 7 Trans. App. 212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bissell-v-balcom-ny-1868.