Connecticut Steam Brown Stone Co. v. Lewis

85 A. 534, 86 Conn. 386, 1912 Conn. LEXIS 100
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedDecember 19, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 85 A. 534 (Connecticut Steam Brown Stone Co. v. Lewis) 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
Connecticut Steam Brown Stone Co. v. Lewis, 85 A. 534, 86 Conn. 386, 1912 Conn. LEXIS 100 (Colo. 1912).

Opinion

Hall, C. J.

On February 11th, 1911, the plaintiff company brought an action against William B. Ma-honey and Thomas Gill, and attached as their goods certain personal property of the value of about $700, which, prior to January 10th, 1911, had belonged to Mahoney and Gill as proprietors of a stone-yard conducted by them in Bridgeport, and which on said January 10th they had, by written bill of sale, transferred to the defendant Lewis, but without having recorded a notice of their intention to make such sale, as the plaintiff claims was required by the provisions of chapter 21 of the Public Acts of 1909.

The bond in suit was given by the defendants to procure the release of said attachment.

*388 The plaintiff subsequently obtained judgment against Mahoney and Gill for $714, and afterward, upon their refusal and that of the defendants to pay said judgment, brought this action. The only question involved in this case is whether, upon the facts found, the provisions of chapter 21 of the Public Acts of 1909 are applicable to the sale of January 10th, 1911, by Mahoney and Gill to the defendant Lewis. That Act, which repeals previous statutes upon this subject, reads as follows: “When any person who makes it his business to buy commodities and sell the same in small quantities for the purpose of making a profit, shall, at a single transaction not in the regular course of business, sell, assign, or deliver the whole or a large part of his stock in trade, such sale shall be void as against all persons who are his creditors at the time of such sale, assignment, or delivery, unless he shall, not less than ten days nor more than thirty days previous to such sale, assignment, or delivery, cause to be recorded in the town clerk’s office in the town in which such vendor conducts his said business, a notice of his intention to make such sale, assignment, or delivery, which notice shall be in writing, describing in general terms the property to be so sold, assigned, or delivered, and all conditions of such sale, assignment, or delivery, and the parties thereto; and said notice shall be signed by such person or in his name by his attorney.”

Concerning the question of the applicability of this statute the trial court has found these further facts: Mahoney and Gill operated a stone-yard, with working benches and tables, grinding wheels, and general tools of the stone-cutters’ trade. They bought building stone, in quantity, sawed into slabs of various sizes and shapes, which were delivered to them at their yard in that form. There they cut the slabs into smaller pieces of various shapes and sizes, to agree with orders *389 given to them to furnish articles of stone to be used in the construction of buildings or their appurtenances. These articles were made to order for particular jobs, and the stone had to be chiseled, tooled, cut, dressed, and polished in accordance with the particular order. They were not used in the identical size and shape that the slabs were in when received. The value of the finished products of the plant was in a large proportion made up of labor and not of material. No change was made in the structure, and the smaller pieces when cut and dressed were easily recognizable as parts of the larger slabs from which they had been cut. They sometimes cut up the stone into sills and similar articles, before receiving orders therefor, and occasionally sold such stone articles to a purchaser who had not previously ordered them, but their regular business was the furnishing stone articles cut and shaped to order.

Prior to and ever since January 10th, 1911, the plaintiff has been a creditor of Mahoney and Gill.

The bill of sale of January 10th described the goods sold as “all cut and uncut stone, tools, traveling crane, building, office furniture, fences, toolshed, and all the property at our stone-yard at. . .

The sale was made in good faith, for a valuable consideration, and Lewis took immediate possession of the property sold, and held such possession at the time of the attachment.

The sale was not in the regular course of the business of Mahoney and Gill, and included all their stock in trade.

Upon these facts the trial court held that the statute cited was applicable to said sale, and rendered judgment for the plaintiff for a sum representing only what was found to be the value of the attachable interest of Mahoney and Gill in the stone attached by the plaintiff, with interest thereon.

*390 Manifestly the Act in question does not apply to sales by persons who sell only at wholesale, whether or not they themselves produce, manufacture, or purchase the goods so sold by them, or change the form of the goods or material purchased by them and which form a part of the commodities sold. It is also manifest that the Act does not apply to persons who sell goods at retail, which they have not bought, but which they can fairly be said to have themselves produced or manufactured. The Act in terms applies only to sales of commodities, by persons who make it a business to buy and to sell in small quantities the commodities which they have purchased.

Some difficulties may arise in determining whether the statute applies when an alleged retail dealer substantially changes the form or character of the goods or materials which he has purchased, before he offers them for sale, and also when one sells some goods at retail in connection with another and perhaps much larger business.

The questions which arise in these cases are whether it can rightly be said that the alleged retail dealer is engaged in the business of selling the commodities which he has bought, when the articles which he sells are, from his own labor upon them, made materially different in form or character from those which he purchased, and whether one who sells commodities at retail in connection with some other business is, within the meaning of the statute, one who “makes it his business” to sell such commodities in small quantities.

We can lay down no definite rule which will always furnish an answer to these questions. The extent to which the materials purchased are changed by the labor of the purchaser, before they are sold as finished commodities, is always an important element to be considered in determining whether one selling commodities *391 so changed can properly be said to be one who “makes it his business” to sell, for the purpose of making a profit, the commodities which he has purchased. And so, too, the extent to which retail sales are made by one, in connection with another business, should be considered in deciding whether the person making such retail sales can fairly be said to be one “who makes it his business” to so sell commodities in small quantities for the purpose of making a profit.

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Bluebook (online)
85 A. 534, 86 Conn. 386, 1912 Conn. LEXIS 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/connecticut-steam-brown-stone-co-v-lewis-conn-1912.