Downer & Co. v. Morrison

2 Va. 237
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJuly 15, 1839
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Va. 237 (Downer & Co. v. Morrison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Downer & Co. v. Morrison, 2 Va. 237 (Va. 1839).

Opinion

Stanard, J.

The view I take of this case renders unnecessary a particular consideration and decision of the questions presented by the exceptions of the plaintiffs in the Court below, in the progress of the trial before the jury. The exception to the opinion of the Court overruling the motion for a new trial, presenting in connection with the other exceptions, all the evidence that was given or offered, if the verdict be warranted by that evidence, it would follow that the plaintiffs have sustained no injury from any error that the Court may have committed in the progress of the trial; and this being manifest on the record, I should hesitate, at least, to reverse for such innoxious error. If, on the contrary, the verdict be not warranted by the evidence, but the law on the facts distinctly proved by, or plainly inferrible from it, clearly entitles the plaintiffs to recover, the decision of the minor questions presented by the other exceptions becomes supererogatory.

The evidence incontestibly establishes these facts. Wilson, professing to act as the agent of the defendants, purchased sundry goods of the plaintiffs, which they charged on their books to the defendants, and bills of these purchases, charging the goods to defendants, were made out by the plaintiffs and sent with ’ the goods to Wilson; and the goods were by him forwarded to and received by the defendants. At a subsequent time, the defendants were informed by the plaintiffs of the fact that such purchases had been made, and payment of the amount was demanded of them; and when that information was given, and demand made, the defendants had not paid Wilson or any other person for the goods; nor had they made any such payment when this suit was instituted. Pausing here, without a resort to other pregnant and significant facts that are established di[245]*245rectly, or by fair inference from the evidence, and that adds strength to the plaintiffs’ right to recover, we have it ascertained that the goods of the plaintiffs which they believed they sold, and which they charged to the defendants, have come to the hands of the defendants, they intending to purchase them from some one at the prices at which they are charged by the plaintiffs; and that the purchase money has not been paid by them to any one. The plaintiffs are creditors as vendors, the defendants are debtors as purchasers of the goods. The plaintiffs are entitled to receive, the defendants are liable to pay the price. What, then, prevents the appropriation of the obligation created by the purchase of the goods to the satisfaction of the debt created by the sale of them ? It is this, according to the argument of the defendants ; a supposed want of privity between the parties. It is objected that Wilson was not the authorized agent to make the purchase or pledge the responsibility of the defendants; and that they are purchasers from Wilson, and responsible to him only. That Wilson could not bind them to the plaintiffs, and they have bound themselves to Wilson only. That the relation of vendor and vendee subsists between Wilson and them, and not between the plaintiffs and them.

Assuming that Wilson purchased as agent of defendants, without their previous authority or subsequent ratification, yet regarding the transaction as it really was, not as the defendants believed it to be, Wilson was not the vendor, nor can he so affirm it in derogation of the plaintiffs’ claim, without a flagrant violation of faith. That faith compels him to disavow the character of vendor. His transaction with the plaintiffs made them the vendors, and professed to make the defendants the vendees ; and it is by force of that contract only, that the title to the goods has passed out of the plaintiffs. He was not for a moment owner of the goods; and compatibly with good faith to the plaintiffs, or even the dofen[246]*246dants, he could not sell them as owner. Nor did he in fact, whatever was the belief of the defendants, sell the goods to them. There is nothing then to sustain the relation of vendor and vendee between Wilson and the defendants, but the alleged belief of the defendants that they purchased from, and were responsible to him only; and the only objection to such a relation between the plaintiffs and defendants is, that the defendants did not know that the plaintiffs were the vendors, and believed that the purchase was made from Wilson. If the plaintiffs, who were the owners and vendors of the goods, and believed the defendants to be the purchasers, cannot recover the price from the defendants, who have received the goods, and have not paid for them, because the defendants believed they were purchasing them from Wilson, it must be because the existence of such a belief negatives the fact of the defendants’ assent to a purchase from the plaintiffs; and the existence of some principle of law which renders necessary to sustain a suit for goods sold, not only the assent of both owner and purchaser to the sale and purchase as it respects the commodity sold and its price, but reciprocal knowledge of the owner and purchaser at the time; that they stand in the relation of vendor and vendee to each other, and to no other. Now, such a principle of law would not only absolve the defendants from the action of the plaintiffs, but from that of Wilson also. If the belief of the defendants that they purchased from Wilson, protects them from the claim of the plaintiffs, who did sell as they believed, to the defendants, and from whom the consideration passed that the defendants have in fact received, because it shews a, want of assent on their part to a contract with plaintiffs; a fortiori, the knowledge of Wilson that he was not the owner and vendor of the goods, and that the sale was by his agency made by the plaintiffs, would disable him from maintaining a suit as vendor; and the result would be, that defendants, confessedly having re[247]*247eeived the goods as vendees, and not paid for them, could not be charged in an action for goods sold and delivered by either plaintiffs or Wilson. This ascertains that there is no such principle of law as that on which the defendants must rest for their exemption from the r ^ action of the plaintiffs. The doctrines of no division of the law, have a closer affinity with the conclusions of sound reason and natural justice, than those that define the rights and responsibilities that arise out of contracts, especially those of a commercial character, and mould the remedies on them. These are, in the main, the offspring of practical good sense, conversant with the usages and conveniences of civilized life, impregnated by the principles of natural equity and justice; and they bear the lineaments that might be expected from such a lineage. The defendants are indisputably liable either to the plaintiffs or to Wilson for the unpaid price of the goods. Similar difficulties exist as to the full assent of both parties to the contract of sale and purchase, when, either Wilson or the plaintiffs present themselves as vendors. How will the law appropriate the confessed obligation of the defendants to pay ? Will it draw it to Wilson

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Bluebook (online)
2 Va. 237, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/downer-co-v-morrison-va-1839.