Haxall v. Willis

15 Va. 434
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedOctober 15, 1859
StatusPublished

This text of 15 Va. 434 (Haxall v. Willis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Haxall v. Willis, 15 Va. 434 (Va. 1859).

Opinion

DANIEE, J.

The reversal of the judgment is asked mainly upon the argument that the ascertainment of the quantity of the wheat by weighing it, as also the ascertainment of the correspondence between the bulk and the sample, were conditions precedent to the vesting of the propert3r; and that as the wheat was accidentally destroyed by fire before the appellants had au opportunity of ascertaining its quantity and quality in *the mode prescribed by the contract, the loss ought not to have been visited upon them, but should have been left to be borne by the appellee.

I shall first examine how far the case is affected by the consideration that the wheat at the time of the loss had not been weighed by the appellants; and, secondly, how far it is affected by the consideration that the bulk had not yet been compared by them with the sample.

And proceeding to dispose of these questions in their order, it must be conceded that the authorities furnish numerous instances in which the rules in respect to the first question are stated in a manner favorable to the views of the appellants.

Thus, Mr. Blackburn, in his treatise on the Contract of Sale, at p. 151-2-3, after stating that where the agreement is for the sale of goods and also the performance of other things, the courts have adopted certain rules of construction for the purpose of ascertaining whether the performance of any of those things is meant to precede the vesting of the propertjq proceeds to say, 1‘These rules, of which there is no trace in the reports before the time of Eord EHen-borough, are laid down, since the time of that learned judge, as rules of English law, in terms nearly equivalent to those in which the37 are laid down as rules of the civil law. They are two-fold: the first is, that where by the agreement the vendor is to do any thing to the goods for the purpose of putting them into that state in which the purchaser is bound to accept, or as it is sometimes worded, into a deliverable state, the performance of those tilings shall (in the absence of circumstances indicating a contrary intention) be taken to be a condition precedent to the vesting of the property. The second is, that when any thing remains to be done to the goods for the purpose of ascertaining the price, as by weighing, measuring or testing the *goods, where the price is to depend on the quantity or quality of the goods; the performance of those things also shall be a condition precedent to the transfer of the property, although the individual goods be | ascertained, and they are in the state in which they ought to be accepted.”

He then proceeds to discuss the reasons of the rules; and in respect to the first he says, “It seems to be founded in reason. In general, it is for the benefit of the vendor that the property should pass; the risk of loss is thereby transferred to the purchaser; and as the vendor may still retain possession of the goods so as to relaiu a secur^ for pa3'ment of the price, the transference of the property is pure gain. It is therefore reasonable, that where by the agreement the vendor is to do something before he can call upon the purchaser to accept the goods as corresponding to Ihe agreement, the intention of the parlies should be taken to be that the vendor was to do this before he obtained the benefit of the transfer of the property. The presumption does not arise if ihe things might be done after the vendor had put the goods in the state in which he had a right to call upon the purchaser to accept them, and would be unreasonable where the acts were-to be done by the buyer who would thus be rewarded for his own default.” “The second rule (however he proceeds) seems to be adopted, somewhat hastily, from the civil law, without adverting to the great distinction made by the civilians between a sale for a certain price in money and an exchange for any thing else. The English law makes no such distinction, but, as it seems, has adopted the rule of the civil law, which seems to have no foundation except in that distinction. In general, the weighing, &c. must, from the nature of things, be intended to be done before the buyer takes possession of the goods; but that is quite a different thing from intending it to be done before *the vesting of the property ; and as it must in general be intended that both the parlies concur in the act of weighing' when the price is to depend upon the weight, there seems little reason why, in eases in which the specific goods are agreed upon, it should be supposed to be the intention of the parties to render the delay of the act in which the buyer is to concur, beneficial to him. Whilst the price remains unascertained, the sale is clearly not for a certain sum of money, and therefore does not come within the civilian’s definition of a perfect sale, transferring the risk and gain of the thing-j sold; but the English law does not require that the consideration for a bargain and sale should be in mone3rs numbered, provided it be of value. -Still both branches of the rule (he adds) seem to be now firmly established, though, as has been already-stated, only within the last half century, and then, it seems, adopted directly from the civil law.”

The second rule as above stated, it cannot be denied, lays down the law as contended for by the appellants. It will be seen, however, on looking into the cases-referred to by the author, as establishing the rule, that, in no one of them had there been any actual change in the possession [876]*876of the goods; that in the three oases of Rugg v. Minett, 11 East’s R. 210; Zagury v. Furnell, 2 Camp. R. 240; and Simmons v. Swift, 5 Barn. & Cres. 857, 12 Eng. C. L. R. 388; on which he mainly relies as illustrations of the rules, the acts of measuring, counting and weighing, by the terms of the agreement, or the usages of the trade, were to be done either by the seller alone, or by him and the buyer concurrently; and that in neither one of these cases do the judges use any expression from which the inference can be fairly drawn, that they would have held the measuring, counting or weighing as necessary precedents to the vesting of the property, if by the terms *of the agreement those acts had been left to be performed by the buyers alone.

In the first case, Eord Ellenborough said, the true enquiry was, “whether every thing had been done by the sellers, which lay upon them to perform, in order to put the goods in a deliverable state.” AndBayley, J., said, that “if the sellers meant to relieve themselves from all further responsibility, they should have done what remained for them to do; and until that was done, the property remained in them.” In the second, Eord Ellenborough said, that “as the enumeration of the skins was necessary to ascertain the price, this was an act for the benefit of the seller; and as the act remained to be done when the fire happened, there was not a complete transfer to the purchaser; and the skins continued at the seller’s risk.” And it was proved in that case, that the custom was for the seller to count the skins, to see that each bale had its complement, before delivery.

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Bluebook (online)
15 Va. 434, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haxall-v-willis-va-1859.