Hotchkiss v. Hunt

49 Me. 213
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJuly 1, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 49 Me. 213 (Hotchkiss v. Hunt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hotchkiss v. Hunt, 49 Me. 213 (Me. 1860).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was drawn up by

Kent, J.

The facts upon which the questions in this case arise, when carefully examined, are few and simple, although the report is somewhat voluminous.

The plaintiffs were the undisputed owners of six hundred Bara hides. They negotiated for a sale of them to Edward A. Frye, and, after various propositions and a long correspondence, they finally agreed to sell them to Frye at a certain price, and receive his notes on time, in payment. Erye assented to the purchase, having made the final proposition as to time of payments of the notes. The hides were at New Haven, where, after the agreement for sale and payment had been made, they were weighed off, and Erye took them into his possession and caused a part of them to be transported to his store in Boston, and left the remainder on a wharf in New Haven, he paying wharfage therefor.

On the day after the weighing, the plaintiff sent to Erye a bill of the hides, and a minute of the time, &c., of the notes to be given, and requesting him to send the notes at once. The notes were not sent, but, six days afterwards, Erye asks for a change of times of payments of the notes. The plaintiffs reply, that they will consult on the subject. The notes were never sent according to the original agreement, but about ten days after the weighing of the hides, on the 8th of October, a new agreement in writing was made, between the parties, by which, as is contended .by the plaintiffs, the original bargain was substantially rescinded, and the title, if [219]*219it ever passed out of them, was reinvested in them. After the contract of the 8th of October, Frye, without the knowledge or assent of the plaintiffs, sent a part of the hides, (the 600 now in question) to the defendants to be tanned. The defendants advanced their notes to Frye, holding, and claiming to hold, the hides as security for such advances, according to an agreement between the parties. This action of trover is brought to recover from the defendants the value of the six hundred hides.

The first question is — was the property of the hides in the plaintiffs at the time of the alleged conversion? The defendants contend that, by the sale and delivery under the first agreement, and the facts connected therewith, the property passed absolutely to Frye, and that the title thus acquired has never been divested.

They say that the contract of the 8th of October was not a resale, or, if it was, that the title was not perfected under such agreement of resale, because there was no delivery, and no consideration. The plaintiffs contend that the delivery under the first contract was conditional and depended upon the payment of the price by the liotes. That on the failure to send the notes, the title, which would otherwise have been perfected, did not pass, and that the subsequent agreement takes effect as a new contract, or as an essential modification, if not entire rescission of the first agreement. It is undoubtedly true, that when the elements of a sale, price, time and terms of payment, and the manner and time of delivery are agreed upon, delivery will, in the absence of all other facts, pass the title. 13ut where there is an express or implied agreement, or understanding that the title is not to vest until payment or delivery of the notes agreed upon, a delivery will not pass the title until the condition is performed, and the vendor, in such a case, may reclaim the property, even from one who has purchased in good faith, and without notice from the vendee. Coggill v. H. & H. Haven Railroad Co., 3 Gray, 545.

It would seem that it is a question of fact for the jury, [220]*220whether there was such expressed or implied agreement entering into and making part of the contract of sale.

But we do not think it necessary to discuss this point more fully, as there is another point made by the plaintiffs, which, if sustained, disposes of this part of the case. The plaintiffs. say, that, admitting that the title did pass to Frye by the weighing off and possession taken by him, yet, by the contract of the 8th of October, made before any right of a third party had intervened, the old contract was rescinded and a new one made, by which the title was revested in the plaintiffs, and Frye afterwards held the hides as their property, according to its terms.

On this point the Judge instructed the jury, that, if the title did pass to Frye by delivery under the first contract, the parties might, by mutual agreement, rescind the former contract, and make a new one different from the first, and, if they did so, that the legal effect of the new contract in writing was a rescission or modification of the original contract, and revested the title in the hides in the plaintiffs, as between the parties, no rights of a third party having intervened, without any farther or other delivery than arises from the fact that Frye, by the new contract, was* to hold and retain the hides for the plaintiffs, and a possession by Frye, as their agent, would be, legally, sufficient to revest the title in the plaintiffs as against subsequent purchasers and persons unlawfully intermeddling with their rights. Is this ruling erroneous ? There can be no doubt that the parties might rescind or annul the first agreement, or that Frye might resell or reconvey the hides to the plaintiffs if he had acquired a legal title thei*eto. The agreement to release Frye from his obligation, connected with the new agreement to tan, are a sufficient consideration.

Thé written contract of October 8th is signed by Frye' alone, and in it he distinctly says, "the ownership of said hides to be vested in the said Hotdhkiss Bros. & Co. until said hides are tanned, at the cost and risk of said Frye.” This language not only recognizes the title but may fairly [221]*221be said to convey it. The whole instrument shows that, under this new agreement, the parties intended that the former sale and delivery were to be annulled, and that, instead of an absolute sale, the plaintiffs were to resume their former ownership, if they had parted with it, and to retain the title until the hides were tanned and the notes were paid. It is insisted, however, that if the title actually passed under the first sale, that a resale can be effected only in the same manner as the original sale, and that, unless a delivery is proved, the title will not revest. This proposition, as a general rule, seems to be well established. But where, by the terms of the agreement, or by a fair implication therefrom, the article thus sold or resold is to remain in the possession of the vendor for a specific time or for a specific purpose-, as part of the consideration, and the sale is otherwise complete, the possession of the vendor will be considered the possession of the vendee, and the delivery will be complete and sufficient.

In the -case of Barrett v. Goddard, 3 Mason, 114, it appeared that certain bales of cotton were sold by marks and numbers, then lying in vendor’s warehouse, for which a note was given on six months, and it was agreed that they might remain rent free, at option of vendee, in vendor’s warehouse; and, although there was no separation or formal delivery in any manner, it was held that the delivery was complete as against a subsequently attaching creditor, whose title was by assignment.

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Bluebook (online)
49 Me. 213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hotchkiss-v-hunt-me-1860.