Freedman v. Avery

94 A. 969, 89 Conn. 439, 1915 Conn. LEXIS 54
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJuly 16, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 94 A. 969 (Freedman v. Avery) 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
Freedman v. Avery, 94 A. 969, 89 Conn. 439, 1915 Conn. LEXIS 54 (Colo. 1915).

Opinion

Burpee, J.

In his complaint the plaintiff alleges that on or about July 25th, 1913, William H. King sold and delivered to him the lumber which is the subject of this litigation, and that he took possession ■ thereof. He made no claim of title, in pleading or argument, based on the deed of King to him executed December 10th, 1912, nor could he successfully, because its separate defeasance made it a mortgage, which, being recorded without the defeasance, was not valid against an attaching creditor of the grantor. Ives v. Stone, 51 Conn. 446.

*445 The alleged sale and delivery apparently were not seriously disputed by the defendant, and the court has found that they were made. No question was raised about consideration or good faith. The contention between the parties concerns only the allegation and claim that the plaintiff took possession of the lumber before the attachment; that is, possession sufficient to repel the presumption of fraud.

In this State the rule of law that requires such a change of possession of personal property sold has been so long established, so often recognized, and so firmly enforced, that no one questions it now. It is settled beyond dispute that this rule should be rigidly applied "to every case where there has not been an actual, visible, and continued change of possession.” Norton v. Doolittle, 32 Conn. 405, 410. The change must so appear "to the view of the world.” There must be something more than good faith and adequate consideration between the parties. If the property is permitted, without legal excuse, “to remain in fact or apparently and visibly the same” as before the sale, it will be subject to attachment for the debts of the vendor as still his property. And the actual change, once made, must be "visibly continued.” Ibid. 411. Even an actual delivery and an actual change of possession is not enough, so long as the property remains in the same apparent relation to the vendor that it had before the sale. “There must, in short, be such a manifest, continued and open change of possession, as to indicate to the world a change of title.” Seymour v. O’Keefe, 44 Conn. 128, 131.

The acts of the plaintiff do not satisfy these requirements. On the day of the sale he went with his son to the lot where the lumber was piled and counted it, and attached to some of it his business cards and a paper declaring his ownership. If those acts by themselves *446 be held to have effected a sufficient change of possession for the time being, they were not sufficient to make the change “visibly continued.” It was certain on that day, as it afterward appeared in fact, that the cards and the paper would not long remain in such condition as to convey information to any one. Such quickly perishable signs were not adapted to, and did not in fact, indicate “a manifest, continued and open change of possession.”

The plaintiff’s attempts, individually and through his attorney and his broker, to sell the lumber, were private transactions with the several persons addressed, which might serve as notice to them of the plaintiff’s claim of ownership, but were not intended to and could not make a change of possession apparent to the public, or “indicate to the world a change of title.” This was what the plaintiff was required to do, and not merely to show to a few persons a change of ownership. His declaration concerning that part of the sale might help to prove, but could not alone establish, the facts necessary to make the change of possession manifest and open. They were not made to the public generally, or to the defendant. Before the time of the attachment the plaintiff permitted the property apparently and visibly to hold the same relation to the vendor that it had before the sale. “To all the world things remained unchanged. . . . The apparently unchanged ownership . . . was a constant denial” of the plaintiff’s statements, “and as a matter of law bore them down.” Hull v. Sigsworth, 48 Conn. 258, 266.

Of the same nature, and for the same reasons insufficient, were his acts, if it is to be assumed that he did anything, to remove the attachments that were put upon the lumber as the property of King between the date of the sale and the time of the defendant’s attachment. We do not intend to say that these acts of the *447 plaintiff, separately or collectively, were not suitable to indicate a change of possession. We say only that collectively they were not sufficient to conform the plaintiff’s conduct to the rule of law that is imperatively controlling upon a person in the circumstances and conditions found to exist in this case.

The things the plaintiff left undone are things a person in such circumstances and conditions might reasonably be required to do; and, if they had been done, they might, in connection with what was done, have well been held to have met the requirements of our law. It appears that he made no attempt to learn who was the owner of the land on which the lumber lay, or to inform him of the sale of it to himself, or to obtain for himself a lease or license to continue to leave the lumber where it was. He placed no durable and conspicuous sign of his ownership upon it. He did not remain in actual and open possession of it. He never advertised his purchase. In these respects, at least, he failed to act upon the standard of conduct which this court approved in Dann v. Luke, 74 Conn. 146, 50 Atl. 46.

The failure of the plaintiff to put this property in any tax list is important only because it shows that he did not do one act of ownership that he should have done after he bought the lumber on July 25th, 1913, and before he asserted his ownership in this action on July 16th, 1914, an interval of nearly a year. But since, as we have said, it was not his ownership only that he must prove, but the all-important change of possession, open and continued, his failure in this particular becomes evidence of much the same kind as his failure to record his bill of sale. In both instances he neglected to put on a public record notice of the change of title.

The court finds that the defendant, when he was completing his attachment, discovered the deed from King to the plaintiff on the town records. In his brief *448 the plaintiff’s counsel suggests, but does not seriously claim, that the defendant thereby received such notice of the sale as would take the place of a sufficient change of possession. But aside from the fact that this deed, because of its unrecorded defeasance, was void "as it respects bona fide creditors” (Ives v. Stone, 51 Conn. 446, 455), and allowing the defendant’s knowledge of the deed to have whatever weight it should have in connection with the other evidence, the law of this State does not support the counsel’s suggestion. The reasons are those given in Hull v. Sigsworth, 48 Conn. 258, 266, and quoted above.

The plaintiff claims that the court below erred in holding that the failure of the plaintiff to take sufficient possession of the property to repel the presumption of fraud was not sufficiently explained.

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Bluebook (online)
94 A. 969, 89 Conn. 439, 1915 Conn. LEXIS 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/freedman-v-avery-conn-1915.