H. H. Mears Son v. Waples

8 Del. 581
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedJuly 5, 1868
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 8 Del. 581 (H. H. Mears Son v. Waples) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
H. H. Mears Son v. Waples, 8 Del. 581 (Del. Ct. App. 1868).

Opinion

*589 By the Court.

This presents the case of a similar interest, if not an equal and balanced interest, on both sides of the suit, with this difference as to the interest of the proposed witness in the result of it, that it preponderates on the side of the party objecting to his competency, his liability to the plaintiffs in the event of their failure to recover in the action, being for the amount of their draft on the late firm of which he was a member and accepted by it, for $11,908.65, and on the other hand his liability to Thomas D. Quincey & Co. in case the plaintiffs succeed in the action, being for the amount of the draft of his late firm on that house and paid by it, for $10,350. It consequently cannot exclude him; nor can the other objection for the reasons stated in the argument. Both objections are therefore overruled.

The witness was then sworn in chief and testified that his firm commenced business in Baltimore in the year 1861, and for two or three years prior to March 1867, did business with H. H. Hears & Son of Philadelphia, and during that time, to the amount of from $150,000 to $200,000. The last cargo of corn they bought of them prior to the cargo involvéd in the present suit, was 6840 bushels on the 14th of January 1867, and which they paid for by a draft at one day’s sight, drawn by them on his firm for the price of it. All their .drafts on his firm from 1863 to 1867, were at one to three days after sight. He detached the bill of lading from their draft on his firm of March 6th 1867, and had done the same with all their other drafts before that when his firm accepted them; and it was never objected to either by them, or by the bank. On the same day that he accepted their last draft and detached the Mil of lading from it, he drew a draft in the name of his firm to the order of the Bank of Commerce in Baltimore, on the firm of Thomas D. Quincey & Co. of Boston, at sight, for $10,350, and attached the bill of lading to it, and delivered them to the Bank for transmission and collection. That was on the 7th of March 1867, and on the 9th of that month it was paid by that firm. His *590 firm bad been shipping corn during the time before mentioned to Boston, and sometimes to other eastern ports; but it had never before that cargo shipped any to that house, and even then he had no acquaintance with any member of it, but on the recommendation of a commercial gentleman in Baltimore, and upon inquiry of him for a good house in the trade there, concluded to ship that cargo to them, and then wrote to them that he might ship to them, which was not long before the cargo was ready to leave Philadelphia. He also wrote to them to insure the cargo there for $13,000. Corn was worth in that market during the months of March and April in that year, from $1.25 to $1.30 per bushel.

Gray, for the plaintiffs.

There was enough disclosed in the facts and circumstances of the case to warrant the position they were about to assume in the trial and argument of it, that M. Hunt & Co. by undue and improper means, fraudulently obtained the bill of lading for the cargó of corn in question from the plaintiffs, and thereby fraudulently obtained possession of the property of the plaintiffs in it, without paying for it according to the contract between them, in full view and anticipation of their speedy and inevitable failure which occurred in four days thereafter. When the possession of property is obtained under a fraudulent contract of sale, it is voidable and revocable *591 at the option of the vendor, as soon as the fraud is discovered by him. And the next proposition we have to submit is, that no one can pass to another a better title than he himself has in goods, and therefore the voidable and revocable nature of such a title which has passed from the original vendor to the vendee, follows and abides with it every where, except where it has passed to an innocent purchaser without notice of the fraud; and any one so claiming the property, must bring himself within this exception to the general rule which he had just stated. But where a person fraudulently or erroneously obtains possession of property outside of the terms of the proposed contract of sale, and without the knowledge of the owner, he can confer no title to it upon another, however innocent such purchaser may be, except where the owner of it has voluntarily armed the wrong doer with the symbol of property, so as to enable the latter to perpetrate a fraud on such purchaser.

*590 James Barrett of Philadelphia, another witness examined for the defendant, testified that on the 18th of March 1867, he received a letter from the firm of Thomas D. Quincey & Co. inquiring if he knew where the schooner Paugussett then was, and that they had an interest in the corn on board of her, and had advanced $10,000 on it, and that upon the 20th. of the month he called on the plaintiffs and informed them of the facts above stated, and that Mr. Mears replied that it was all right, and that the captain bad just left their office to start on the voyage with the corn to that firm, and that he immediately telegraphed to them to that effect.

*591 We have proved enough to satisfy the jury that M. Hunt & Co. in this case, were guilty of a premeditated design to get this cargo of corn into their possession, and to sell it without paying the plaintiffs a cent for it, and the moment the plaintiffs discovered that design to defraud them in the transaction, and took steps to avoid and defeat it, all the title of M. Hunt & Co. to the cargo instantly ceased, and they could confer no title to it upon even an innocent purchaser without notice or knowledge of the fraudulent means by which they had acquired it. Because, in such a case he takes a tainted title, and that taint remains and inheres in it. Hil. on Sales 332, 334. We have shown that that firm obtained the possession of the corn under a contract to pay for it in cash, but with the intention not to pay for it as contracted for, or to pay for it at all; and the sale was, therefore, void, and passed no right or title whatever in it to them. Earl of Bristol v. Willsmore 8 E. C. L. R. 218. Irving et al. v. Motley et al. 20 E. C. L. R. 244. Since the time of these decisions, the cases had multiplied and have shed much light upon the question. *592 If a vendee obtains goods under a contract to pay for them on delivery, and on the delivery of them gives a check without having the funds to meet, or a reasonable prospect of being able to meet it, he takes no title to the goods. Hawes v. Crowe, 21 E. C. L. R. 784. If a purchaser obtains possession of goods with the fraudulent intention of never paying for them, he acquires no property in them. The contract is void, and not merely voidable. Load v. Green, 15 M. & W. 216. Ch. on Contr. 321. And any purchaser of them from such a vendee, must affirmatively show that he is an innocent purchaser, md that he had no reason whatever to suspect the tainted and fraudulent title of such vendee in them. Caveat emptor

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Bluebook (online)
8 Del. 581, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/h-h-mears-son-v-waples-delsuperct-1868.