Chapman v. Shepard

39 Conn. 413
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedNovember 15, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 39 Conn. 413 (Chapman v. Shepard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chapman v. Shepard, 39 Conn. 413 (Colo. 1872).

Opinion

Sevmoue, J.

The plaintiff brought his action of trover in three counts :—

1st. For the alleged conversion of three hundred and eighty bags of meal belonging to the plaintiff.

2d. For the conversion of seven hundred and fifty bags of meal belonging to the plaintiff and defendant as tenants in common.

3d. Alleging the meal to belong to the plaintiff and defendant and one John T. Gill as tenants in common.

It appears from the finding of facts by the judge who tried the cause in the Superior Court, that the defendant, being the owner of a lot of bags of meal consisting of between five and six hundred, on the 10th of January, 1867, sold the lot to John'T. Gill at the price, of $2.40 per bag. The property was then in a schooner lying at Long Wharf, in New Haven. Afterwards, on the 25th of January, Gill sold to the plaintiff five hundred of these bags still remaining in the schooner. Of this sale the plaintiff notified the defendant, and the defendant gave the plaintiff authority immediately to remove the bags he had purchased. The plaintiff however told the defendant that he was busy that day, but in a few days would send for them. The plaintiff a few days after this conversation, to wit, on the 4th of February, gave Gill his note, which was paid at maturity, for the price of the meal. On the 5th of February the plaintiff received one hundred and forty of the bags, and then took no more, because the defendant said the rest could not be removed until some corn, for which the bags were used as a bulk-head, had first been taken out. Gill became notoriously insolvent on the 7th of February. The defendant, upon due demand made by the plaintiff, [419]*419refused to deliver the remaining three hundred and sixty bags of meal and for such refusal this action was brought. The sale to Gill was for cash, and the defendant had not been paid for the meal by him so sold.

The judgment in the Superior Court was for the plaintiff, and the defendant seeks for a new trial.

The defendant’s counsel claim that the title did not pass to Gill, for that the counting of the ba^s was an act remaining to be done as between the defendant and Gill ; and they also claim a right to' retain for the unpaid price. As between the defendant and Gill these claims would perhaps be well founded, but we think they cannot prevail against the plaintiff upon the circumstances disclosed in the finding. The defendant gave the plaintiff authority to make immediate removal of the five hundred bags without intimating that Gill’s title was not perfect, and thus left the plaintiff to pay the price to Gill. The defendant also treated the meal as belonging to the plaintiff, by delivering one hundred and forty bags, and inducing hinjyjo arfow the residue to remain without removal, to^ accommÜBRfe the defendant as a bulkhead for his corn, intimating still no infirmity in the title of Gill.

We think it is too late for the defendant to call Gill’s title in question after having thus treated it as perfect and complete. The Superior Court very properly regarded the defendant as estopped from setting up the claims now made. If authority is needed for a point so plain it may be found in Stoveld v. Hughes, 14 East, 308.

But the point most strenuously pressed by the defendant’s counsel is this, that admitting Gill’s title to have been such that the defendant cannot be permitted to deny it, still, the plaintiff’s title is defective. He bought of Gill five hundred out of a larger number of bags, and with the exception of the hundred and forty delivered, the remaining three hundred and sixty wore not separated from the mass, and they insist that until such severance the title did not pass ; that until separation the contract was merely executory, and that the title remained in Gill and therefore remained subject to the plaintiff’s lien.

[420]*420This claim comes with somewhat an ill grace from the defendant, inasmuch as it appears that the separation would have been made on the 5th of February had it not been on his request and for his convenience postponed until the bags should be no longer needed as a bulk-head for his corn. But the same considerations of estoppel which apply to the other branch of the case do not apply here, and we must therefore proceed to examine with some care the propositions of law on which the claim of the defendant now under consideration is founded.

The Superior Court having found'the issue for the plaintiff we cannot grant a new trial unless some point of law was wrongly decided. Upon the facts found we must regard the title as having passed from Gill to the plaintiff, unless the law is so that until and without the severance of the five hundred bags from the bulk of five or six hundred the title could not pass. The evidence detailed would warrant the Superior Court in finding that the parties intended an executed sale. The price was paid, and nothing remained to be done, as between buyer and seller, to complete the sale. The plaintiff was to take his meal when he wanted it, and as he should want it. Notice of the sale was given to the defendant, in whose custody the property was, who attorned to the plaintiff.

The case therefore depends upon the inquiry whether it be, as the defendant’s counsel contend, an absolute rule of law that, upon the sale of a portion of a larger bulk, the contract remains in judgment of law executory until the portion sold is severed and separated for the purchaser from the mass. It must be conceded that this question is not free from difficulty, and that in regard to it respectable authorities differ.

In regard to a large class of cases the law is indisputably as the defendant claims. If I sell ten out of a drove of one hundred horses, to be selected, whether by myself or by the vendee, no title can pass until the selection is made. This rule prevails wherever the nature of the article sold is such that a selection is required, whether expressly provided for [421]*421or not by the terms of the contract. If the articles differ from each other in quantity or quality or value, the necessity of a selection is clearly implied. In all such cases the subject matter of the contract cannot be identified until severance, and the severance is necessary in order that the subject matter of the contract may be made certain and definite.

But where the subject matter of the sale is part of an ascertained mass of uniform quality and value, no selection is required, and in this class of 'cases it is affirmed by authorities of the highest character, that severance ’is not, as matter of law, necessary in order to vest the legal title in the ven-dee to the part sold. The title may and will pass if such is the clear intention of the contracting parties, and if there is no other reason than want of separation to prevent the transfer of the title.

The leading case on this subject in England is that of Whitehouse et al., Assignees of Townsend v. Frost, 12 East, 614. That case has been the subject of some adverse criticism, but in respect to the point under consideration it seems to us to have been properly decided. The sale to the bankrupt was of ten tons of oil, in a cistern containing forty tons. There was no severance of the ten tons from the remaining thirty, and the court held that the title vested in the bankrupt, so that his assignee could maintain an action of trover. The case was elaborately discussed at the bar and by the bench, and Blano, J.

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Bluebook (online)
39 Conn. 413, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chapman-v-shepard-conn-1872.