Dunlop v. Mercer

156 F. 545, 86 C.C.A. 435, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 4719
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedOctober 31, 1907
DocketNos. 86, 2,711
StatusPublished
Cited by81 cases

This text of 156 F. 545 (Dunlop v. Mercer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dunlop v. Mercer, 156 F. 545, 86 C.C.A. 435, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 4719 (8th Cir. 1907).

Opinion

SANBORN, Circuit Judge.

Two corporations of Arizona, which had been doing business in Minnesota, were adjudged bankrupts in the United States District Court in that state. The trustee of one of them, of the Waterbury-Zimmer Implement Company, filed a petition in the court below in the matter of the bankruptcy of the other, the Western Implement Company, for an order that certain vehicles, machinery, and other merchandise, whieh were in the possession of the Western Company when it was adjudged a bankrupt and thence came to the possession of the trustees of its estate, be delivered to the trustee of the property of the Zimmer Company, because, as he alleged, this property had been sold and delivered by the Zimmer Company to the Western Company under an agreement, dated February 5, 1906, to the effect that the title and ownership thereof should remain in the vendor until the goods were paid for in cash, and no payment on a.ccount of them had been made. The trustees of the Western Company defended on the grounds that the contract was not made until September 8, 1906, after most of the property had been delivered; that it was made with the intent to defraud the creditors of the Western Company ; that it was withheld from record with like intent; that the Zim-mer Company was not qualified to do business in Minnesota until June 30, 1906, after the larger part of the property had been delivered; and that the contract on its face evidenced an absolute sale of the property to the Western Company. Evidence was introduced, and the court overruled all the defenses except the last, but sustained tiiat, and denied the prayer of the petition. This ruling was assigned as error, and the case is presented by petition to revise and by appeal. As it involves the consideration of the evidence of the relation of the parties and of their acts in making and performing the contract, it will be considered on the appeal, and the petition to revise is dismissed.

While the evidence is not conclusive, and there is proof of suspicious circumstances surrounding the execution and performance of the contract, the conclusion of the court below that the agreement was made on or about February 5, 1906, the day of its date, that it was not made nor withheld from record with any actual intent or purpose to defraud the creditors of the Western Company, and that the vehicles and mer[548]*548chandise in question were delivered by the Zimmer Company to the Western Company in the performance of the contract, and in that way came to the possession of the trustees of its estate, is supported by the weight of the testimony and is affirmed; Counsel insist, however, that if there was no actual intent to defraud, yet the contract upon its face evidenced an absolute sale, so that the title to the property delivered under it vested in the Western Company before it was paid for. The terms of the agreement pertinent to this question are that the Zimmer Company, in selling the goods to the Western Company, does so with the distinct understanding that the title to them shall remain in the Zimmer Company until all the accounts and notes of the Western Company are paid in cash, when the former will give a bill of sale of the remaining goods to the Western Company, and that the Western Company shall have the privilege of selling the articles shipped in the regular course of business, with the understanding that their proceeds shall remain the property of the Zimmer Company, to be held as collateral or credited on the notes or accounts of the Western Company at the option of the Zimmer Company. Does this contract evidence an absolute or a conditional sale?

A conditional sale is one in which the vesting of the title in the purchaser is subject to a condition precedent, or in which its revest-ing in the seller is subject to a failure of the buyer to comply with a condition subsequent. In re Columbus Buggy Company, 74 C. C. A. 611, 613, 143 Fed. 859, 861. The provision of this contract that the title to the goods delivered under it should remain in the vendor until the notes and accounts of the vendee had been paid in cash, and that when they were- so paid the vendor would execute a bill of sale of the goods remaining in the vendor’s possession, discloses the intention of the parties to impose, and effectually imposes, the precedent condition of the payment of the notes and accounts of the vendee upon the vesting of the title to the property in the Western Company. There is no other rational explanation of its presence in the agreement. It could have been inserted for no other purpose, it can have no other effect, and it cannot be annulled or disregarded by construction in the absence of conflicting terms in the contract. No such .terms are perceived. The provision that the vendor might sell the merchandise in the regular course of its business, with the understanding that the proceeds should remain its property and be held as collateral to or credited upon the notes and accounts of the vendee, is not inconsistent, but consonant, with the retention of title to the unsold goods in the vendor. The option of the latter, there secured, was not to recover or to transfer the title to the goods, but to credit the proceeds or to hold them as collateral security. It had no right under the contract to require a restoration of the goods if the purchaser paid the agreed prices for them. The purchaser had no option to pay for, or to return, the property, but was bound to the vendor by an enforceable obligation to pay the agreed prices for the goods it ordered. The agreement has every element of a conditional sale — a vendor, a vendee, agreed prices, an obligation of the vendee to pay them, an obligation of the- vendor that, upon condition that the vendee pays the agreed prices, but not otherwise, the title of the vendor shall vest in the pur[549]*549chaser. Thus it evidenced a sale in which the vesting of the title in the vendee was made subject to a condition precedent, and it became a contract of conditional sale. Bierce v. Hutchings, 205 U. S. 340, 348, 27 Sup. Ct. 524, 51 L. Ed. 828.

The arguments and decisions in Andrews v. Bank, 20 Colo. 313, 36 Pac. 902, 46 Am. St. Rep. 291, and Herryford v. Davis, 102 U. S. 235, 26 L. Ed. 160, to the effect that contracts, in some respects similar to that in hand, evidence absolute sales, chattel mortgages, and secret liens, because the purchasers are absolutely bound to pay the agreed prices and have no option to pay, or to refu.se co pay, and because the only right of the sellers was to take and sell the property to pay the debt, have been considered, but they are not persuasive. It is not true in the case under consideration that the only right of the vendor to the property remaining in the hands of the vendee was the right to take and sell it, to pay the latter’s debt. It had the right, upon the default of the purchaser, to take and keep it as its own, without selling it or applying the proceeds of it to pay the vendor’s debt, and the legal effect: of that taking, under the established rule of property in Minnesota would be to annul the obligation to pay the agreed price of the property taken. Aultman v. Olson, 43 Minn. 409, 45 N. W. 852; Harvester Works v. Hally, 27 Minn. 495, 8 N. W. 597; Keystone Mfg. Co. v. Casselius, 74 Minn. 115, 76 N. W. 1028; Alden v. Dyer, 92 Minn. 134, 99 N. W. 784. Nor is it true that an option in the purchaser to pay, or to refuse to pay, for goods it buys, is an indispensable element of a conditional sale.

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Bluebook (online)
156 F. 545, 86 C.C.A. 435, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 4719, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunlop-v-mercer-ca8-1907.