Gardner v. Lane

94 Mass. 39
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1866
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 94 Mass. 39 (Gardner v. Lane) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gardner v. Lane, 94 Mass. 39 (Mass. 1866).

Opinion

Bigelow, C. J.

The question at issue in the present case is not whether the property in certain chattels has passed, as between vendor and vendee, but whether a purchaser has acquired a valid title thereto as against an attaching creditor of the vendor. It often happens that under a contract of sale a title may pass as between the immediate parties to the contract which [43]*43cannot be set u)3 to defeat the rights of third persons. For example, a delivery of property may not be necessary to vest a title in a vendee as against his vendor, but it is always essential to pass the title as against creditors or bona fide purchasers without notice. Upon the same principle, no right by way of estoppel can arise in favor of the plaintiff in this action, on the ground that the original owner of the property in controversy has done certain acts, the effect of which is to preclude him from asserting any title to it as against the plaintiff. Such acts might avail the plaintiff, if the issue was between him and his vendor. But the creditors of the latter cannot be affected by them. They have the right to hold the property by attachment to secure their debts, unless it appears that a valid sale and delivery has vested a legal title to it in the plaintiff. Besides; the effect of an estoppel suo vigore is not to pass a title to property, but to preclude a party from setting up any right or claim to it. A debtor cannot, by his dealings with a third person to which his creditor is neither party nor privy, shut out the latter from his right to sequestrate his debtor’s property by attachment and execution. The only mode in which such right can be defeated is by proof of a valid sale and delivery under and by virtue of which a title to the property has passed to and become vested in the vendee prior to the attachment or seizure by a creditor.

The single test, then, by which to determine which of the two parties to .this action has the better title to the property in dispute is, to ascertain whether the plaintiff’s evidence shows a valid sale and delivery to him prior to the attachment by the defendant. The solution of this question depends, we think, on the most elementary principles, although in their application to the facts in proof a nice discrimination may be required.

The ordinary definition of a sale, as a transmutation of prop™ erty from one person to another for a price, does not fully express the essential elements wtiich enter into and make up the contract. A more complete enumeration of these would be, competent parties to enter into a contract, an agreement to sell, and the mutual assent of the parties to the subject matter of the sale and to the price to be paid therefor. A learned author adds [44]*44to this summary the brief and significant remark, If any of these ingredients be wanting, thére is no sale.” Atkinson on Sales, 5. Story on Sales, § 8. Blackb. on Sales, 110. Thus it cannot be doubted that if under a contract of sale a delivery was made, through mistake, of an article different from that agreed upon by the parties, there would be no sale of the article delivered, and no property in it would pass, for the simple reason that the vendor had not agreed to sell nor the vendee to buy it. There would in fact be “ no contract between the parties in respect to the article actually furnished ; ” or, to express it in different words, when a material mistake occurs in respect to the nature of the subject matter of a sale, there is no mutual assent, and therefore the contract is void. Story on Sales, §§ 148, 458. And so it was held when this case was before us at a previous term. 9 Allen, 492. This principle is well expressed in the maxim of the civil law, “ Cum in corpore dissentitur, appwret nullam esse acceptionem.”

Applying thip principle to the facts proved at the trial, it would seem to be clear that no title passed to the plaintiff in the barrels of salt and No. 3 mackerel, because he made no agreement for the purchase of these articles. His agreement or contract of sale was for articles of an entirely different kind, and at the time of the attachment he did not know that the articles which had been delivered to him were not the same in kind as those which he had agreed to purchase. Nor had he then assented to receive the articles delivered as being in conformity to or in pursuance of his previous contract of sale, unless it can be said that a party assents to that of which he has no knowledge.

But it is very strenuously and ingeniously urged in behalf of the plaintiff that the ease at bar, on the facts developed at the ast trial, does not come within the principle above stated, and that it is distinguishable from the case as before presented to the court. The ground of this contention may be briefly stated thus. The plaintiff offered to prove that the vendor knew that the property which he delivered to the plaintiff was not the same in kind as he had agreed to sell and the plaintiff to buy, but en tirely different, and that he intentionally delivered to the latter [45]*45the barrels of salt and of No. 3 mackerel instead of the articles which he had previously agreed to sell to him, and that this fact was entirely unknown to the plaintiff until after the attachment by the defendant. Upon the offer of proof, it is insisted that the case comes within that class in which a vendor has fraudulently misrepresented the quality of the property which is the subject matter of the contract of sale, and thereby deceived and defrauded his vendee ; and that although the latter might at his election rescind the contract and avoid the sale, yet the title to the property passes and becomes vested in the vendee, subject only to the right of rescission and avoidance by him.

But this argument seems to us to overlook an essential distinction between cases of that nature and the one at bar. In the former, the minds of the parties meet in regard to the subject matter of the sale. The one agrees, to buy, the other to sell, the same identical chattels. The mistake or fraud relates solely to the quality, not to the identity, of the article. But in the latter, there has been no mutual agreement or understanding concerning the specific property which the vendee is to receive under his contract. No particular chattel or mass, purporting to be the same as that bargained for, and seen and known by both parties as that which was the subject of sale between them, has been delivered and received, but an entirely different article, which the vendee has never seen, which he did not agree to buy, and of the nature of which he is wholly ignorant, is passed over to him instead of the property which he agreed to purchase. How can it be said that any property passes under such circumstances ? The vendee has not agreed to buy the article. He has not assented to its delivery to him, either under the contract of sale or in substitution of that which he agreed to buy. He does not know what the article is. To uphold such a transaction as a valid sale and delivery would be to say that the title to property can pass to a vendee, which he has never agreed to purchase and to the delivery of which he has not assented; in other words, that a valid.sale and delivery exist where the essential elements of the contract are wanting. The fallacy of the argument urged in behalf of the plaintiff consists in the assumption that the [46]*46vendee agreed to receive the barrels of salt and of No. 3 mack erel in fulfilment and completion of the previous contract of sale; or, in other words, that he accepted “ the identical body corpus

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Bluebook (online)
94 Mass. 39, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gardner-v-lane-mass-1866.