Gould v. Bourgeois

18 A. 64, 51 N.J.L. 361, 22 Vroom 361, 1889 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 61
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJune 15, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 18 A. 64 (Gould v. Bourgeois) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gould v. Bourgeois, 18 A. 64, 51 N.J.L. 361, 22 Vroom 361, 1889 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 61 (N.J. 1889).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Depue, J.

This suit was upon a promissory note made by the defendant. The defence was the want or failure of consideration.

The city council of Holly Beach City proposed to build a breakwater. The defendant was an applicant for a contract to do the work, and prepared and sent to the city council an ■agreement with the city to that effect. Members of the city council sent word to the defendant that the city had already •entered into a contract for the building of the breakwater with Gould & Downs; that these parties could not fulfill their contract, and that, if the defendant would make a satisfactory arrangement with Gould & Downs, the city would give him the contract. The parties thereupon entered into negotiation, the conclusion of which was a contract, in writing and under ■seal, whereby Gould & Downs, for the consideration of a note for $375, and $500 in city bonds, assigned to the defendant '“all our right, title and interest in a certain contract entered Into by the authorities of Holly Beach City and ourselves to build a certain breakwater ordered built by a resolution passed April 14th, 1887.” Subsequently the city council, having obtained the opinion of counsel that the city had no power to build the breakwater, refused to ratify the arrangement of the defendant with Gould & Downs, and abandoned the project of constructing the work.

[372]*372The note sued on was given in compliance with the terms of this assignment. There was no proof of an express warranty by Gould & Downs of the validity of their contract, nor any evidence from which fraud, either in representation or concealment, on their part, could be inferred. The power of the city to make the contract was not mooted until after these parties had concluded their arrangement and the assignment had been made, and if the contract was invalid its invalidity arose from the city charter, a public act equally within the knowledge of both parties.

The defendant’s contention was that, inasmuch as there was a sale of the contract, a wai’ranty that the contract was a valid contract was implied, and that the contract, being ultra vires on the part of the city and void, the consideration entirely failed. If the proposition on which the defence was rested be sound in law, the defence was appropriate in this suit. The doctrine of implied warranty of title in the sale of goods applies as well to the sale of a chose in action, and extends,, not merely to the paper on which the chose in action is-written, but embraces also the validity of the right purported to be transferred. Wood v. Sheldon, 13 Vroom 421. Nor is there anything in the nature of the alleged infirmity of the contract that would bar the defence. In the ordinary case of a suit on a breach of a warranty of title, the validity of the vendor’s title against the adverse claimant is triable if the purchaser has in fact lost title, although the transactions which determine the vendor’s title are res inter alios aeta. If the contract, which was the subject matter of the assignment, was in fact ultra vires, a foundation was laid for this defence, the city having repudiated the contract in limine on that ground.

The validity of the defence offered and overruled depends upon the fundamental proposition, Avhether, under the circumstances of this sale, a warranty of title is implied in law. " The theory on which a warranty of title is implied upon the sale of personal property is, that the act of selling is an affirmation of title. The earlier English cases, of which [373]*373Medina v. Stoughton, 1 Salk 210, 1 Ld. Raym. 593, is a type, adopted a distinction between a sale by a vendor who was in possession and a sale where the chattel was in the> possession of a third person — annexing a warranty of title to the former, and excluding it in the latter. In the celebrated case of Paisley v. Freeman, 3 T. R. 51, Buller, J., repudiated this distinction. Speaking of Medina v. Stoughton, this learned judge said, that the distinction did not appear in the report of the case by Lord Raymond, and he adds: “ If an affirmation at the time of the sale be a warranty, I cannot feel a distinction between the vendor’s being in or out of possession. The tiling is bought of him, and in consequence of his assertion, and if there be any difference, it seems to me that the case is strongest against the vendor when he is out of possession, because then the vendee has nothing but the warranty to rely on.” Nevertheless, the English courts continued to .recognize the distinction with its incidents as adopted in Medina v. Stoughton to some extent, at least so far as to annex the incident of an implied warranty of title on a sale by .a vendor in possession. Later decisions have placed the whole subject of implied warranty of title on a more reasonable basis. Mr. Benjamin, in his treatise on Sales, after a full •examination and discussion of the late English cases, states ■•the rule in force in England at this time in the following ■terms : “A sale of personal chattels implies an affirmation by •the vendor that the chattel is his, and therefore he warrants the title, unless it be shown by the facts and circumstances of the sale that the vendor did not intend to assert ownership, but only to transfer such interest as he might have in the chattel sold.” 2 Benj. Sales (Corbin’s ed.), §§ 945-961. In this country the distinction between sales where the vendor is in possession, and where he is out of possession, with respect to implied warranty of title, has been generally recognized, but the tendency of later decisions is against the recognition ■of such a distinction, and favorable to the modern English rule. 2 Benj. Sales (Corbin’s ed.), § 962, note 21; Bid. War., i§§ 246, 247. The American editor of the ninth edition of [374]*374Smith’s Leading Cases, in the note to Chandelor v. Lopus, after citing the- cases in this country which have held that the-rule of caveat emptor applies to sales where the vendor is out of possession, remarks that, in most of them, what was said on. that point was obiter dicta, and observes “ that there seems no-reason why, in every case where the vendor purports to sell an absolute and perfect title, he should not be held to warrant it.” 1 Sm. Lead. Cas. (Edson’s ed.) 344.

In Wood v. Sheldon, supra, Chief Justice Beasley, in delivering the opinion of the court, adopted, in terms, the rule-stated by Mr. Benjamin, and made it the foundation of decision. The precise question now under discussion did not then arise. In Eichholz v. Bannister, 17 C. B., N. S., 708, 721, Erle, C. J., said : “ I consider it to be clear upon the ancient authorities that if the vendor of a chattel, by word or conduct-,, gives the purchaser to understand that he is the owner, that tacit representation forms part of the contract, and that if he-is not the owner his contract is broken. * * * In almost all the transactions of sale in common life, the seller, by the-very act of selling, holds out to the buyer that he is the-owner of the article he offers for sale.” It that case it was-held, that on the sale of goods in an open shop or warehouse,, in the ordinary course of business, a warranty of title was implied.

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Bluebook (online)
18 A. 64, 51 N.J.L. 361, 22 Vroom 361, 1889 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 61, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gould-v-bourgeois-nj-1889.