Kelley Springfield Road Roller Co. v. Schlimme

69 A. 867, 220 Pa. 413, 1908 Pa. LEXIS 794
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 16, 1908
DocketAppeal, Nos. 279 and 280
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 69 A. 867 (Kelley Springfield Road Roller Co. v. Schlimme) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kelley Springfield Road Roller Co. v. Schlimme, 69 A. 867, 220 Pa. 413, 1908 Pa. LEXIS 794 (Pa. 1908).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Mestrezat,

The above cases were tried together in the court below, and as they arise out of the same transaction and the decision of the two cases depends on the same legal principle, we will dispose of them together.

On or about April 15, 1904, the plaintiff company delivered to the defendant, John Schlimme, two steam road rollers. They remained in his possession until November 1, 1904, when a written contract was entered into between the plaintiff company and the Schlimme Construction Company for the rollers. This contract was in the shape of a written offer by the defendant company, and an acceptance by the plaintiff company. It was called a lease. The defendant company was to receive the rollers, and pay for their use and hire for a period of thirteen months the sum of $5,400, payable, except $250 cash in hand, in thirteen notes, one due each succeeding month. The monthly payments, secured by notes, were as follows: the first, third and fourth months, $200; the second month, $150 ; the fifth to the twelfth month inclusive (8 months), $500 ; and the thirteenth month, $400. The notes were to draw interest at the’ rate of six per cent.

[415]*415The contract provided that the possession and ownership of the rollers should not pass from the plaintiff company, and “ at the expiration of this lease they shall be returned to them.” It also provided that in case the defendant company failed to protect the machines “ or in case any of the said notes are not paid at maturity, or within-thereafter,” the plaintiff company “ shall have the right to enter upon the premises where said rollers may be located, and take possession of, and remove same without trespass.”

The agreement concluded with a provision that if the defendant company paid all the notes, it should have the privilege of purchasing the rollers, and that for the further consideration of one dollar, you will sell and deliver said rollers to us and make a bill of sale for the same.”

The contract was signed by the Schlimme Construction Company, and the notes were signed by John Schlimme. The cash in hand was not paid nor were any of the notes paid. No money whatever was paid by Schlimme or the construction company to the roller company on the contract. The rollers were kept by the construction company until on or about September 27, 1906, when, according to the testimony of the plaintiff’s sales agent, the plaintiff entered the premises of the construction company and took possession of the rollers, “ in exercising of the rights reserved in this contract, whatever they may be.” So far as the evidence discloses, the plaintiff still retains possession of the rollers and claims them as its property.

These two suits were brought by the Kelley Springfield Road Roller Company to recover the $5,400 and its interest, one of the suits being brought on the notes against John Schlimme; the other, on the contract against the Schlimme Construction Company. On the trial, the court granted a nonsuit in each case which it subquently refused to take off. The plaintiff has taken these appeals.

The rights of the parties in these actions depend upon the contract between the plaintiff company and the construction company, and the subsequent action of the parties in pursuance thereof. The contract itself shows that the $5,400 required to be paid for the use of the rollers constituted the full value of the rollers. That .appears conclusively from the stipulation in [416]*416the contract by which the plaintiff company was to sell and deliver the rollers to the construction company on the payment of that sum and an additional nominal consideration;' While the contract provides that the sum named shall be “ for the use and hire of the said steam road rollers for a period of thirteen months,” yet the clause providing for the sale determines the fact that the sum was the full consideration for the machines. The rental value fixed by the contract was, in the judgment of the parties, the market value of the rollers when the construction company took possession of them.

The contract may be regarded as dual: (1) a hiring or bailment, and (2) a contract of sale. The ultimate purpose of the agreement was a sale of the rollers to the construction company. If the latter complied with the terms of the contract as to payment, the title of the machines passed to the construction company, and it could demand of the plaintiff a bill of sale transferring the title to it. The possession of the machines passed to the construction company upon the execution and delivery of the contract, and it had a right to the possession of the machines so long as it complied with the terms of the agreement, that is, made the payments stipulated in the contract. The title would follow the possession as soon as all the installments of the consideration money were paid, and then an indefeasible title to the machines would become vested in the construction company.

The so-called lease or bailment was to preserve the ownership of the bailor until the full consideration money was paid. The plaintiff company did not intend the title to the machines to pass from it until that event had occurred, and, under our decisions, the contract entered into by the parties was legitimate and legal for such purpose.

By the provisions of the agreement, it will be observed that “ at the expiration of this lease they (the rollers) shall be returned to them (the plaintiff).” If for any reason the sale had not been consummated, as contemplated in the contract, it would have been the duty of the construction company to return the rollers to the plaintiff at the expiration of the thirteen months. Of course, it is not to be reasonably inferred, that the construction company would pay the $5,400, the value of the machines, and redeliver them to the plaintiff at the expi[417]*417ration pf the so-called lease. On the other hand, the reasonable presumption is that if the construction company had paid the $5,400, it would have required the plaintiff to comply with the stipulation in the contract and transfer the title to the machines to the construction company. This it had a legal right to do, and the presumption is that it would have done so.

Under the contract, the plaintiff had two remedies for a default in payment of the installments stipulated to be paid in the agreement: it could, in affirmance of the contract, have brought suit as each installment became due, permitting the machines to continue in possession of the defendant company; or it could “ enter upon the premises where said rollers may be located, and take possession of, and remove same without trespass,” thereby rescinding the contract. These two remedies are secured to the plaintiff by the agreement of the parties. They are unquestionably not cumulative, but are in the alternative. This necessarily follows from the conceded fact that the pay for the use and hire ” of the rollers was their full market value, and the stipulation that on the payment thereof the title to the property was to pass to the construction company. There is no ground whatever for interpreting this contract so as to impose on the construction company a penalty of the full value of the machines for a failure of the company to comply with the agreement. To subject the company to such penalty, it must be so stipulated in the contract in clear and unmistakable language. On the contrary, we find in the agreement provisions for its enforcement as well as its rescission.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
69 A. 867, 220 Pa. 413, 1908 Pa. LEXIS 794, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kelley-springfield-road-roller-co-v-schlimme-pa-1908.