Collins v. Oliver

149 A. 647, 299 Pa. 372, 1930 Pa. LEXIS 617
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 15, 1930
DocketAppeals, 117 and 118
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 149 A. 647 (Collins v. Oliver) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Collins v. Oliver, 149 A. 647, 299 Pa. 372, 1930 Pa. LEXIS 617 (Pa. 1930).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Sadler,

This case is not free from difficulties. It involves a transaction in whiskey stored in a bonded warehouse in Baltimore, represented by certificates calling for 145 barrels, which plaintiff had agreed to buy from defendants, the holders thereof. He paid to them $6,090.86, being 25% of the purchase price. He obtained five barrels of the whiskey from the warehouse and after he had received this quantity, the remaining 140 barrels were sold by the warehouse company to third parties for the payment of storage and other charges due upon them, without notice to plaintiff or to defendants, with the result that plaintiff was not able to obtain any more of the whiskey called for by the certificates. He thereupon so notified defendants and made demand upon them for the return of the amount he had paid on account, which they refused to refund. This action was then brought by plaintiff to recover it, and defendants counterclaimed for the balance due on the entire quantity of the whiskey, amounting to $17,880.34, with interest. The case was heard by the court below without a jury under the Act of April 22,1874, P. L. 109, and judgment was given for plaintiff for the amount of his claim, $6,090.86, with interest from a date named, from which defendants appeal.

*375 This critical inquiry is: Who, under the agreement between the parties, ivas responsible for the unpaid storage and other charges against the liquor due to the warehouse company, plaintiff or defendants? Before considering the provisions of the contract specifically dealing with the payment of such charges, we shall determine the effect of the agreement as to the title to the liquor, for, in general, the duty to pay storage and other charges to preserve the goods is upon the owner. The agreement was in writing. It is dated April 26, 1921, and recites that the defendants are the owners of 145 barrels of whiskey in a bonded warehouse in Baltimore and hold 29 certificates of the Baltimore Distilling Company therefor, each for five barrels, and then proceeds as follows: “Whereas the said Edmund Oliver and James McKane have agreed to sell and convey and dispose of the said whiskey to the said Hugh Collins for the price or sum of three dollars and fifty cents ($3.50) per gallon, the number of gallons being fixed and agreed upon as shown by the above mentioned certificates. The said whiskey tobe paid for by the said Hugh Collins as hereinafter set forth. The said Hugh Collins agrees to pay to the said Oliver and McKane the sum of five hundred dollars ($500.00) in cash upon the execution of this agreement, the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged, and within thirty days thereafter to pay to the said Oliver and McKane the further sum of five thousand five hundred ninety dollars and eighty-six cents ($5,-590.86) in cash, which two sums represent twenty-five per cent. (25%) of the entire purchase price. As each certificate is surrendered and the liquor represented by said certificates is taken from bond, the said Collins agrees to pay in full, in cash, to the said Oliver and McKane the above named price of three dollars and fifty cents ($3.50) per gallon for each gallon represented by said certificate until the entire amount due said Oliver and McKane has been paid. The said Hugh Collins further agrees to assume and pay all storage and *376 other charges against said liquor from the date of said certificates, which it is understood was sometime in March, 1915; it being understood and agreed that all such charges already paid by the said Oliver and McKane shall be returned to them by the said Collins. The said certificates shall remain in the possession and control of said Oliver and McKane until the liquors represented by said certificates have been fully paid for as above together with all storage and other charges and when it is fully paid for the remaining certificates shall be delivered to and become the property of the said Hugh Collins. From and after January first, nineteen hundred and twenty two, the said Hugh Collins agrees to pay interest at six per cent. (6%) to the said Oliver and McKane for such unpaid balance as may be due them upon the liquors and the purchase price then remaining unpaid.” (The above italics are ours.)

The court below concluded as a matter of law that the |6,090.86 which plaintiff paid was a payment to secure the execution of the contract, which means that in effect the contract was only an option and it is so termed by counsel for appellee. With this we are unable to agree. The contract was a sale. It contains no language which warrants the conclusion that what was to be accomplished by it was to give an option or that it was other than an actual sale. The vendors “agreed to sell and convey and dispose of” the whiskey to Collins for the price named and he covenanted that it was “to be paid for” by him “as hereinafter set forth.” The two payments actually made “represent twenty-five per cent (25%) of the entire purchase price.” After January 1, 1922, Collins was to pay interest on the unpaid balance of the “purchase price.” The Sales Act of May 19,1915, P. L. 543, section 18, provides: “Where there is a contract to sell specific or ascertained goods, the property in them is transferred to the buyer at such time as the parties to the contract intend it to be transferred”; and section 19 states as a rale for determining that intent, *377 “Unless a different intention appears......where it is an unconditional contract to sell specific goods, in a deliverable state, the property in the goods passes to the buyer when the contract is made, and it is immaterial whether the time of payment or the time of delivery, or both, be postponed.” This codifies our decisions prior to the act: “When the terms of sale are agreed upon, and the bargain is struck, and everything the seller has to do with the goods is complete, the contract of sale becomes absolute as between the parties without actual payment or delivery, and the property, and the risk of accident to the goods, vests in the buyer”: Perkins v. Halpren, 257 Pa. 402, 409; Henderson v. Jennings, 228 Pa. 188, 193; Com. v. Hess, 148 Pa. 98; Williston on Sales (2d ed.), section 259-63. The absolute obligation to pay interest on the purchase price unpaid, negatives the idea that a mere option for future purchase was intended, as does also the fact disclosed by the record, that appellee paid the fire insurance on the liquor until 1925. This is a charge normally assumed by the owner; and payment thereof by the buyer is evidence to show the understanding of the parties was that the title was vested in him: 24 R. C. L. 17. As all other elements point to a sale, the retention of the control of the warehouse certificates was solely to secure the payment of the price, and did not in any way affect the change of title. In the light of these factors, we conclude that the effect of the contract was to vest the whiskey in Collins. The cases' cited by appellee are not in point. They involve contracts where the seller was to make delivery to the buyer and delivery had not been made.

We now come to the critical question as to whose duty it was under the contract to take care of the storage and other warehouse charges.

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Bluebook (online)
149 A. 647, 299 Pa. 372, 1930 Pa. LEXIS 617, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/collins-v-oliver-pa-1930.