Harrison v. . Scott

96 N.E. 755, 203 N.Y. 369, 1911 N.Y. LEXIS 792
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 21, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 96 N.E. 755 (Harrison v. . Scott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harrison v. . Scott, 96 N.E. 755, 203 N.Y. 369, 1911 N.Y. LEXIS 792 (N.Y. 1911).

Opinion

Hiscock, J.

This action was brought by the respondent as assignee of the Arto-Litho Company, to recover $3,000 paid by the latter on the purchase price of a printing machine bought by it from appellants’ testator. The action was based on the allegations that said machine proved unsatisfactory to the vendee and that, therefore, under the contract of sale it could be returned and said money recovered. The only question urged for our consideration on this appeal is the one springing out of the defense that after delivery to it of said machine the vendee executed a chattel mortgage thereon, and that this was such conclusive evidence of its acceptance as to preclude a return thereof and recovery of the moneys paid thereon.

The substantial facts by which the answer to the question thus presented is to be determined are as follows:

The appellants’ testator sold the machine to respondent’s assignor in January, 1907, under a contract which provided that the price of the machine should be $8,000, and that settlement should be “made for same as follows: On the acceptance of this proposition you (the vendee) to pay us the sum of $3,000 cash, which amount will be returned to you if the machine does not prove *372 satisfactory. * * * It is understood and agreed that the title to the above-mentioned property does not pass out of our possession until fully paid for. And in case of any default in any of the conditions herein named, we shall have the right to take immediate possession of the property.” There was more or less delay in testing the machine, and correspondence between the parties relating thereto was passing as late as August 29, 1907. No claim seems to have been made on the trial that the vendee, as a matter of law, unreasonably delayed making this test, but on the evidence as now presented to us this claim, if made, could not have been sustained.

July 25, 1907, the vendee executed to respondent a chattel mortgage on various property, including this press, as security for his indorsement of certain notes. Respondent was the president of the vendee, and, in addition to the presumption which would prevail that he was acquainted with the terms of the purchase of said machine and with the fact that a test thereof had not been completed, he testified specifically that he was so acquainted with the terms under which the company held the machine; that the vendor had title to it until it was paid for; that no test of the machine had been made; that he was present at a meeting of the board of directors, and voted for a resolution authorizing the vice-president to execute the mortgage. On two occasions subsequent to the execution thereof he wrote a letter requesting the vendor to remove the press on the ground that it was not satisfactory and to refund the $3,000. The notice of-sale under this mortgage which the mortgagee caused to be given was of “the right, title and interest of the Arto-Litho Company in and to ” the press in question, and at the sale it was stated that the only interest which would be sold was “the interest that the Arto-Litho Company has in this machine to the extent of $3,000. * * * The right, title and interest that was in there.” In addition, a representative of the vendor was present and *373 “made a protest against the sale on the ground that the title to the machine still remained in the Walter Scott & Co.” The machine was subsequently retaken by the vendor because of alleged default by the vendee in the performance of its contract.

On evidence of these facts and some others of less importance the learned trial justice dismissed plaintiff’s complaint on the ground that his assignor had accepted the press, the theory of course being that the execution by the vendee of the chattel mortgage was such an assertion of absolute ownership as to be utterly and conclusively inconsistent with the idea that it still retained the machine on trial with power to return and recover the money paid on it.

In this determination I think he erred, and that the learned Appellate Division was correct in reversing the judgment.

It will be assumed without discussion for the purposes of this case that the execution under ordinary circumstances by the vendee of a mortgage on personal property subject to inspection to a bona fide mortgagee for value would be conclusive evidence of an acceptance. This conclusion would not be altered by the fact that it was executed before inspection or testing because a vendee might if he chose waive such rights and elect to take the machine independent thereof. The fact that an examination had not been completed might be one to be considered with others in a proper case as indicating lack of intention on the part of the vendee to make an acceptance of the article in question. In such a case as is suggested between the alternative that the vendee was unlawfully mortgaging property which he did not own, and the other one that he intended to accept the property and become qualified to execute a mortgage, the law certainly ought to adopt the latter one.

But the facts in this case as bearing on the intent of the vendee may be clearly and widely distinguished from *374 those which have been assumed. The mortgagor had a right to test the machine and return it if not satisfactory and recover the payment made thereon, and until the entire purchase price was paid the title expressly remained in the vendor. This process .of testing was still incomplete at the time the mortgage was executed. The mortgagee was the president of the mortgagor and knew that at the time the instrument was executed no satisfactory test had been secured and that inspection was still being continued for the purpose of determining whether the machine was satisfactory, and he voted to have the mortgage executed under these circumstances. As further indicative of the intent with which the instrument was executed and accepted by the respective parties, the tests were continued after its execution, as might be found, by and with the participation and consent of the mortgagee, and he it was who finally notified the vendor that they had proved unsatisfactory and that the machine must be retaken and the money returned. Still further, as giving character to the acts of the parties in executing the mortgage, the mortgage, only purported to offer on the sale under it the right and interest of the mortgagee, namely, the right to recover the three thousand dollars which had been paid.

From all these facts and possibly some others which have not been stated I think that the jury would have had the right to determine that the mortgage was executed and accepted subject to the terms of the contract and subject to the right of the mortgagor to complete its test and return the machine if it proved unsatisfactory, leaving the mortgagee in that case to recover under his mortgage as the interest covered thereby the payment which had been made; that there was no intention on the part of the vendee to waive its right of inspection and accept the press irrespective thereof. And this independent of the question whether the vendee under the contract of sale could acquire title until full payment *375 of the purchase price.

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Bluebook (online)
96 N.E. 755, 203 N.Y. 369, 1911 N.Y. LEXIS 792, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrison-v-scott-ny-1911.