Hatch v. Oil Co.

100 U.S. 124, 25 L. Ed. 554, 10 Otto 124, 1879 U.S. LEXIS 1815
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedNovember 17, 1879
Docket40
StatusPublished
Cited by105 cases

This text of 100 U.S. 124 (Hatch v. Oil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hatch v. Oil Co., 100 U.S. 124, 25 L. Ed. 554, 10 Otto 124, 1879 U.S. LEXIS 1815 (1879).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Clifford

delivered the opinion of the court.

Contracts for the purchase and sale of chattels, if complete and unconditional and not within the Statute of Frauds, are sufficient, as between the parties, to vest the property in the purchaser, even without delivery; the rule being that such a contract constitutes a sale of the thing, and that its effect is, if not prejudicial to creditors, to transfer the property to the purchaser against every person not holding the same under a bona fide title for a valuable consideration without notice. The Sarah Ann, 2 Sumn. 211; Gibson v. Stevens, 8 How. 384, 399; 2 Kent, Com. (12th ed.) 493; Leonard v. Davis, 1 Black, 476-483.

Nine hundred and forty-four thousand white-oak barrelstaves, of the value of $17,500, wex-e attached by the defendant as sheriff of the county, under certain processes mesne and final, which he held for service against the manufacturers of the staves, to secure certain debts which they owed to their creditox-s. No irregularity in the proceedings is suggested, but the plaintiffs claimed to be the owners of the staves by purchase from the manufacturers, axxd they brought replevin to recover the px-operty. Service was made, and the defendant appeared and demanded a trial of the matters set forth ixx the declaration. Issue having been joined between the parties, they went to trial, and the verdict and judgmexxt were ixx favor of the plaintiffs. Exceptions were filed, by the defendant, and he sued out the present writ of error.

Errors assigned in the court are us follows: 1. That the court erred in instructing the jury that as soon as the staves were piled and counted, as provided in the second agreement, the title to the same vested ixx the plaintiff company as vendee, and in refusing to instruct the jury that the only interest the plaintiffs acquired in the staves’ before they were delivered was as security for advances in the nature of a mortgage interest. 2. That the court erred in refusixxg to instruct the jury that if there was no actual delivery of the property and change of *129 possession the agreement of sale was void as against the creditors of the manufacturers, because not recorded as required by statute. 3. That the court erred in refusing to instruct the jury that if the evidence did not show that the fifty thousand staves not piled on the leased land were not counted, the title to that parcel did not pass to the plaintiffs for any purpose, and that the defendant, as to that parcel, was entitled to their verdict. 4. That the • court erred in refusing to instruct the jury that under the agreement no title to any of the staves passed to the plaintiffs until they were actually placed upon the leased land and were counted by the designated person, and in instructing the jury that the title to the staves piled near the leased land passed to the plaintiffs. 5. That the court erred in refusing to instruct the jury that no title to any staves passed to the plaintiffs other than those contracted to be sold by the first agreement, and that if the jury find that there was any portion of the staves replevied not of that description, that as to such portion the plaintiffs are not entitled to recover. 6. That the court erred in excluding the testimony offered by the defendant, as set forth in the record.

Sufficient appears to 'show that the manufacturers of the staves, on the day alleged, contracted with the plaintiffs to sell them one million of white-oak barrel-staves of certain described dimensions, to be delivered as therein provided, for the price of $30 per thousand, subject to count and inspection by the plaintiffs, who agreed to receive and pay for the same as fast as inspected.’ But before the staves had been furnished, to wit, on the 28th of August in the same year, the parties entered into a new agreement in regard to the staves, in which they refer to the prior one, and stipulate that it is to continue in operation, subject to modifications made in the new contract, of which the following are very material to the present investigation: 1. That the manufacturers shall make and deliver the staves properly piled in some convenient place, to be agreed between the parties, on land in Deerfield, to be controlled by the plaintiffs, and that the delivery shall be made as fast as the staves are ■ sawed. 2. That the plaintiff shall furnish a man to count the staves from week to week as the same shall be piled. 3. That when the staves shall be so piled and *130 counted, the person counting the same shall give the manufacturers a certificate of the amount, which, when presented to the plaintiffs, shall' entitle the party to a payment of $17 per thousand as part of the purchase price. 4. That upon the piling and counting of the staves as provided, “ the delivery of the same shall be deemed complete, and that said staves shall then become and thenceforth be' the property of the plaintiffs absolutely and unconditionally.”

Other material modifications of the first agreement were made by the second, some of which it is not deemed necessary to' consider in disposing of the case.

Early measures were adopted to perfect the arrangement, as appears from the fact that the manufacturers, October 4 in the same year, leased to the plaintiffs a small tract of land to be used for piling and storing the staves; and the case shows that all the staves except fifty thousand were piled on that site, the fifty thousand stáVes being piled on land owned by the manufacturers, about one hundred or one hundred and fifty feet distant from. the pile on the leased tract, on which were certain buildings owned and occupied by the lessors, the mill where the staves were manufactured being situated on the same section a little distant from the other buildings. None of the staves were manufactured when the contracts were made.

It was admitted by the plaintiffs that the lease was never filed in the clerk’s office and that it was never recorded in the office of the county register of deeds. Certain admissions were also made by the defendant, as follows: That the parties to the contracts acted in good faith in making the same, and that the contracts and lease were duly executed; that all the staves seized were manufactured by the said contractors, and that all except fifty thousand of "the same were piled on the leased tract.

Nothing was required at common law to give validity to a sale of personal property except the mutual assent of the parties to the contract. As soon as it was shown by competent evidence that it was agreed by mutual assent that the one should transfer the absolute property in the thing to the other for a money price, the contract was considered as completely *131 proven and binding on both parties. If the property by the terms of the agreement passed immediately to the buyer, the contract was deemed a bargain and sale; but if the property in the thing sold was to remain for a timé in the seller, and only to pass to the buyer at a future time or on certain conditions inconsistent with its immediate transfer, the contract was deemed an executory agreement. Contracts of the kind are made in both forms, and both are equally legal and valid; but the rights which the parties acquire under the one are very different from those secured under the other.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
100 U.S. 124, 25 L. Ed. 554, 10 Otto 124, 1879 U.S. LEXIS 1815, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hatch-v-oil-co-scotus-1879.