Jenness v. Wendell

51 N.H. 63
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJune 15, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 51 N.H. 63 (Jenness v. Wendell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jenness v. Wendell, 51 N.H. 63 (N.H. 1871).

Opinion

SáRGent, J.

It seems to have been questio vexata, when an estate (real) was sold by auction in separate lots, and the same person became the purchaser of several lots, whether a distinct contract arose as to each, or whether there was but one contract as to the whole. But the better opinion appears to be, at least at law, that a distinct contract is created as to each lot, — though it would be otherwise when a written contract is afterwards entered into and signed for the purchase of several lots at an aggregate price. Chitty on Con. 298; Johnson v. Johnson, 3 B. & P. 169; Roots v. Lord Dormer, 4 B. & Ad. 77; Poole v. Shergold, 2 Bro. Ch. 118; Seaton v. Booth, 4 Ad. & E. 528.

In Dykes v. Blake, 4 Bing. N. C. 463, two lots of land were sold at auction separately to the same person, but at the close of the sale one agreement was entered into for the sale of both lots at the aggregate price. Held, that a material misdescription of one lot would entitle the purchaser to rescind the contract as to both.

In Van Eps v. Schenectady, 12 Johns. 436, plaintiff had purchased thirty-three lots of land at auction, at as many separate sales, on the same day, paying a distinct and separate price for each lot, and took thirty-three separate certificates, one of each lot'; and the plaintiff having paid for all his lots, and the defendant not being able to make good title to three of the lots, — held, that this was not an entire contract, and that the vendee could not' rescind the contract in toto, but must take a conveyance of such lots as defendant could convey with good title, and might recover back with interest the money paid upon the lots to which defendant could give no title. Held, also, that the vendor was obliged to give separate deeds of the several lots, if required, and his offer to execute one deed for the whole did not render the contract entire.

Prom these last two cases it would seem that the contract will be considered to be entire for several lots, or separate for each lot, much more according to the circumstances of each case and the way the business was finally closed up between the parties, and upon their understanding and intentions in relation to the trade, than upon the fact that the lots were sold at auction, and struck off to the same party at one or at several bids.

Chitty applies the same rule to personal property, which he lays down in relation to real estate, viz., that in a sale of goods by auction, if several lots be put up separately and separately knocked down to the same person, and on each occasion the auctioneer writes down the ven-dee’s name, there is in point of law a distinct and independent contract as to each lot, although the purchaser afterwards sign one memorandum that he has bought the several lots; though it would be [67]*67otherwise if the memorandum were for the purchase of the several lots at an aggregate price. Chitty on Cont. 383, 404. But it will be observed that he places much stress upon the fact that the sale was hy auction, where the auctioneer is so far the agent of both parties that he may bind them by signing their names to the contract.

But in this country, where household furniture, farming tools, and such like articles about a farm or a hotel are sold, or where the sale also includes the stable stock, as in this case, or the farm stock and produce, we think there is ordinarily very little difference in fact between sales at an auction and a sale at any other place, or contracted in any other way, of several' articles at an agreed price, which are all put together in one account.

When the question is as to there being such a memorandum in writing of the sale, signed by the parties or their agents, as will make it a valid sale under the statute of frauds, it*often becomes material to consider whether the sale was by auction or otherwise. See Brown on Stat. of Frauds, secs. 347, 369, where the cases are mentioned in which the same person may be the agent of both parties, — as the broker, with his bought and sold notes and written book of entries; the auctioneer, who, when he sells the property of one, and knocks it down to the highest bidder, becomes the agent of the bidder, as he was previously that of the seller, to conclude the contract, and does conclude it by entering the buyer’s name as such in his sales-book, which contains the substance of the contract. In the last section, he adds, — “ This rule applies equally to public officers not professedly auctioneers, but selling property at public auction, such as sheriffs and their deputies, administrators, commissioners, acting under order of court, land commissioners, &c., * *' * but would not extend to a mere private agent of the vendor, assuming to sell property at auction; nor is a commission merchant regarded either as an auctioneer or broker, so as to enable him to bind the purchaser of goods by a memorandum.”

The same author, in sec. 335, says, — “ In considering the question, when the price of the goods sold was held to amount to the sum fixed by the statute, we saw that the prices of a number of articles, each less than that sum, but in the aggregate exceeding it, were to be taken together so as to bring the contract within the statute, if the purchases were all made at the same time, or so connected as to show the transaction to be one and the same ; and in like manner, the acceptance and receipt of one or a part of one of such parcels in a combined purchase is sufficient to perfect the contract as to the whole. It may often be a matter of difficulty to determine whether the transaction was one and the same. In the common case of a number of articles purchased at private sale of a shopman, for instance, at the same time, though at separate prices, it is clear that the aggregate is to be taken as the purchase. The same has been held as to the aggregate of various purchases made by a party at an auction, and also in a case where the parties had met by appointment for the purchase of timber, and had proceeded together to several places some miles apart, [68]*68making bargains for timber at each place, at separate prices, but all on tlie same'day. In each of the instances referred to, there was a memorandum or bill of the whole made out and presented, and assented to by the buyer, to which fact much weight was allowed, as showing that the parties regarded the transaction as one and entire.”

In the case before us, nothing is said of the memorandum which was made at the sale, if any was made, and therefore no presumptions are to be made concerning it. The questions raised are, whether these parcels of furniture, that were bid off separately, are to be treated as constituting so many separate and distinct contracts and sales, or whether the whole transaction constituted but one sale, an entire contract.

Mills v. Hunt, 17 Wend. 333, is a case strongly in point. In that case no question was raised concerning the memorandum of the sale, but simply whether each bid at an auction, by the same party, at which a lot of goods is knocked down, constitutes a separate and distinct contract and sale, or whether they altogether constitute one entire contract; and if the latter, then whether there had been such a partial delivery of the goods as to take the 'case out of the operation of the statute of frauds.

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Bluebook (online)
51 N.H. 63, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jenness-v-wendell-nh-1871.