Copland v. Bosquet

6 F. Cas. 513, 4 Wash. C. C. 588
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 15, 1826
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 6 F. Cas. 513 (Copland v. Bosquet) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Copland v. Bosquet, 6 F. Cas. 513, 4 Wash. C. C. 588 (circtedpa 1826).

Opinion

WASHINGTON, Circuit Justice.

The first question in this cause is, whether the sale by Amory to the plaintiff, as the agent of Beylle ■& Co. was absolute, or conditional? If the former, then the right of property was im■mediately changed, and became vested in Beylle & Co.; if the latter, it was not divi st-•ed out of Amory until the terms of the contract were complied with; unless those terms were afterwards waived by Amory, by an unconditional delivery of the property. Some of the general principles of law applicable to sales of personal property, may be briefly stated as follows. Upon the completion of the contract of sale, and before delivery, the property of the thing sold is changed, and passes to the vendee. But if the sale be for money to be immediately paid, or to be paid upon delivery, payment of the price is a precedent condition of the sale, which suspends the completion of the contract until the condition is performed, and prevents the right of property from passing to the vendee, unless the vendor chooses to trust to the personal credit of the -vendee. If credit be not given, this bargain is considered nothing more than a communication. This principle however is available to the vendor only where the goods remain in his possession after the sale, and are not delivered; for if they be delivered unconditionally, that fact is evidence of the agreement of the vendor to trust to the personal responsibility of the vendee, and operates in the same manner as if the sale had been on credit If credit be given, the property immediately changes, and the vendee may bring trover for it, without paying, or tendering the price.

The memorandum made of the contract in this case, though very short, is very significant of the intention of the parties to it. It admits, we think, but of this construction, that the wine was to be paid for in one of two ways, at the option of the vendee, viz. with cash at the stipulated discount, or by paper to be perfectly satisfactory to the vendor. It is most apparent from the correspondence, as well as from the testimony of Mr. Blanchard; who, as clerk of Mr. Amory, made the contract; that it was so construed and understood by all the parties concerned in it Although the names of the prmc’pals, from whom the purchase vras made, were disclosed to Mr. Amory; he was nevertheless an entire stranger to them, as well as to their standing and solidity; as appears from the inquiries which he caused to be made in Boston, and in Philadelphia. It is highly improbable, therefore, that he would have agreed to sell .them on any other terms than cash, or approved paper. If we have rightly construed the contract, it would seem to fo'.low conclusively, that the sale was conditional, that is, for cash, or approved paper, and that this condition, whichever of the alternatives was elected by the vendee, was precedent of the sale. For if a sale for cash does, from the nature of the contract, imply a condition precedent, so as to prevent a change of the property until the money is paid, it is very difficult to perceive upon what, ground a sale for approved paper should not equally imply a precedent condition.

There are not many cases to be found directly upon this particular subject; although the following seem to have a strong bearing [516]*516upon 'it In the case of Payne v. Shadbolt, 1 Camp. 427, the defendant sold a parcel of -wood to the plaintiff, to be paid for on delivery, by a bill at two months. The defendant permitted part of the wood to be removed without receiving any bill, but refused to part with the remainder until the terms of the contract should be complied with. In an action of assumpsit against the vendor for the non-delivery of the remainder of the wood, Lord Bllenborough held, that the delivery of a part of the wood was only a dispensation with the terms of the contract pro tanto, and that the vendor was entitled, at any time to stand on his rights, as they were originally established by the contract of sale. This is certainly a strong case. Bor .what were the rights of the vendor on which he was entitled to stand, and which this decision maintained? To retain the thing sold till the terms of sale were complied with, by the vendee’s delivering a bill at two months. But if this were a credit sale, and the stipulation to deliver such' a bill did not amount to a condition precedent, the vendor had no right to retain possession of the wood, or of •any part of it, but the vendee would have been entitled, as soon as the contract was made, to bring trover. So, in the case of Harris v. Smith, 3 Serg. & R. 20, which was replevin for goods sold at auction and purchased by the defendant, the terms of the sqle being “approved indorsed notes at sixty days.” After the sale the defendant offered to give a person whom he named, as hi's in-dorser, and promised to send immediately a note so indorsed to the auctioneer, upon ■which the goods were delivered. It was decided the delivery did not change the property. If, say the court, the vendor rely on the promise of the vendee to comply with the terms of the sale, and deliver the goods absolutely, the property is changed, though the condition be not performed. But where performance and delivery are understood to be simultaneous, possession obtained by artifice will not avail. Now here the contract -for .approved notes was considered to imply a condition precedent for the reason above mentioned. For if it did not, then it was a credit sale, and the property was changed by the sale without delivery. But -the court call it a conditional sale, in so many words. The cases of Hussey v. Thornton, 4 Mass. 405, and Haggerty v. Palmer, 6 Johns. Ch. 437, have also a strong applica.ioa to this part of the subject. We conclude, therefore, upon this point, that the sale was conditional. But although the sale was of that character, still it was competent to the vendor to dispense with the condition; and if the subsequent delivery of the wine was unconditional, that circumstance is evidence of such dispensation, and that the vendor looked not to the wine, but to the personal security of the vendee. It becomes necessary, therefore, to inquire,

2. Whether the delivery to the vendee's agent was absolute or conditional? Blanchard. who made the contract on the part of Amory, and who delivered the wine, swears that upon the plaintiff’s first application for the delivery, it was refused, and that he was told that it would be first necessary for Mr. Amory to be satisfied of the goodness of the paper, as he had not received satisfactory information from those to whom application had been made. That, becoming impatient, the plaintiff again applied for the wine, when it was delivered, expressly on condition that he should cause to be produced a satisfactory acceptance, or cash interest off, agreeably to the terms of sale; and that he pledged his personal responsibility to this effect, which was considered a sufficient guarantee for the fulfilment of the terms of the sale. Here then was a delivery to the agent upon his promise, which, in the view of the law, was the promise of his principal, to fulfil the terms of the contract, as the express condition of the delivery; and to which was added the personal responsibility of the agent, by way of collateral security, and not with a view to a dispensation with the conditions of the sale; as was contended for by the defendant’s counsel. Such a construction of the language of the witness would be in direct hostility with the terms of the engagement, as he has related them.

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Bluebook (online)
6 F. Cas. 513, 4 Wash. C. C. 588, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/copland-v-bosquet-circtedpa-1826.