Ridgway v. Baizley Iron Works, Inc.

46 Pa. Super. 267, 1911 Pa. Super. LEXIS 265
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 3, 1911
DocketAppeal, No. 239
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 46 Pa. Super. 267 (Ridgway v. Baizley Iron Works, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ridgway v. Baizley Iron Works, Inc., 46 Pa. Super. 267, 1911 Pa. Super. LEXIS 265 (Pa. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

Opinion by

Morrison, J.,

Some time prior to January, 1905, there was stored on a lot at Twelfth street and Washington avenue, a lot of material which came probably from the tearing down of a building where the Bellevue-Stratford hotel in Philadelphia now stands. Among this material was a quantity of curbstones and they appear tp have been in charge of a man designated all through this record as Mr. Livingstone, [269]*269and it appears that he represented Mr. Boldt, or whoever owned the curbstones. This Mr. Livingstone had an office at the entrance to the lot where the curbstones' were stored. A short time prior to January 3, 1905, the plaintiffs had inspected the stones and they then went to the defendant, on January 3, 1905, and bought the stones and two days thereafter paid for the same $160, and received a receipted bill, signed by the defendant, therefor. On the day of the purchase the defendant delivered to the plaintiffs an order of which the following is a copy: “Phila. Jany 3, 1905. Mr. Livingstone, N. E. Cor. 12th and Washington Ave., Philada. Please allow Mess. B. Ridgway and Son to remove curbstones from the yard. The John Baizley Iron Words, 514 South Delaware Ave., Phila. Alt.” The order was addressed to “Mr. Livingstone” and it is singular that plaintiffs’ counsel, having the burden of making out a case, did not develop in his proofs the full name of this man who plays an important part in this case.

Counsel for plaintiffs states the question involved thus: “On a sale of personal property is the delivery complete when the vendor gives an order upon a third party in possession thereof to deliver to the vendee, which order the third party refuses to honor? ” This is not a fair statement of the question. There is not a scintilla of evidence in the record showing that the vendor’s order was ever presented to Mr. Livingstone and that he refused to deliver the property. The plaintiffs never made an attempt to take possession of the curbstones, but they sold them to William Trimble who sent a teamster to the lot to haul them away. And after the teamster had hauled three of the stones, a “gentleman,” as the testimony shows, stopped him, and then Trimble, ceased hauling stones and made no further effort to get them. There is not a particle of evidence that the gentleman who told Trimble’s teamster he could not have the stones and who threatened to arrest the teamster was the Mr. Livingstone who had charge of the yard where the stones were stored. In fact [270]*270the evidence tends to show that the man came from a mill in the neighborhood and not from Mr. Livingstone’s office. It may broadly be stated that the testimony fails to disclose any connection between the “gentleman” who threatened to arrest the teamster and any one entitled to the custody of the stones. There was no evidence of defect in defendant’s title to the stones, or of claims or liens upon them by any other person whatever.

The testimony shows beyond all dispute that the sale of the stones was made by the defendant to the plaintiffs on January 3, 1905, and that William Trimble who purchased them from the plaintiffs made no attempt to remove the stones till the latter part of February or in March following, the witnesses not being sure of the date. This being an action by the first purchasers of the stones from the defendant to recover the purchase money on account of the failure of the plaintiff’s vendee to get the stones, we have for decision the single question of whether or not the plaintiffs took title to the stones by virtue of what took place between them and the defendant on January 3 and 5, 1905. The testimony showed that the stones had been bought by the defendants from Mr. Livingstone acting for the owner and there is not the slightest evidence in the case attacking the title which the defendant derived through the action of Livingstone. Nor is there any testimony that if the order of January 3, 1905, had been promptly, or within a reasonable time, presented to Mr. Livingstone at his office on the ground, the stones could not have been hauled away without difficulty.

Plaintiffs’ counsel have cited a number of text-book writers, among them, Tiffany on Sales. On page 274 of the second edition of that work, the author says: “If the goods are not in the custody of any person, as timber lying at the disposal of the seller on the premises of the person from whom he bought it, or at a public wharf, or logs floating in a river, delivery may be made by word or act, putting the goods at the disposal of the buyer and suffering him to assume the same position of the control which the [271]*271seller had.” The same counsel cite Benjamin on Sales, 5th ed., p. 742, and we there find: “Where, however, it is the buyer’s own fault that he did not obtain an attornment or possession, the transfer of an order or warrant will be deemed to be a delivery by the seller; as where the buyer might have obtained possession within a reasonable time, but has unreasonably delayed, and the goods have been stopped in transitu by a former seller.” When we remember that there was no attempt made to present the order in the present case for at least four weeks and probably two months, and that the order never was presented to the person on whom it was drawn, who had custody of the stones, it would seem that the above quotation from Benjamin fits the present case very closely.

The case of Thol v. Hinton, 4 W. R. 26, is also cited by counsel for plaintiffs. In that case it was held that the transfer of a warrant without the attornment of the bailee does not amount to a delivery. Parke, B., said: “If the warrant enabled him to get possession of the goods it would be a delivery; but in this case the warrant did not enable him to get them, for the man who had them would not deliver them, and he is not bound to bring action of trover against him.”

The case of Brown & Co. v. McCaffrey & Sons, 3 Pa. Superior Ct. 431, is cited by plaintiff as directly in point, but we do not so understand that case. The first syllabus indicates the distinction between that case and the present one. “In all executory contracts of sale title does not pass until delivery. If the goods contracted for were not then in existence, or not yet manufactured, or not yet selected out of a lot of similar articles, then the subject-matter of the contract is undefined, and remains so until there is some setting apart of the goods to the vendee’s order, as in the absence of actual delivery, will constitute a legal delivery.”

In the present case the articles sold were a lot of curbstones lying on a certain designated lot and the sale embraced all of that character of stones lying on this lot. [272]*272Thus the articles sold were clearly designated and set apart and we are unable to see why, under the above authority, the sale of January 3 and 5, 1905, did not constitute a legal delivery. This, we think, must be so where the purchaser never presented his evidence of title, the order for the stones, to the person to whom it was directed.

Perkins v. Dacon, 13 Mich. 81, is cited by plaintiffs’ counsel to the end that the delivery of the order was not a delivery of the articles sold. But that case is not in point. That appears to have been, a case of an order for some wheat which was with other wheat in an elevator and had never been measured out or set apart.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Spickler v. Lombardo
11 Pa. D. & C.3d 627 (Somerset County Court of Common Pleas, 1978)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
46 Pa. Super. 267, 1911 Pa. Super. LEXIS 265, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ridgway-v-baizley-iron-works-inc-pasuperct-1911.