Scranton v. . Clark

39 N.Y. 220, 6 Trans. App. 132
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 5, 1868
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 39 N.Y. 220 (Scranton v. . Clark) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scranton v. . Clark, 39 N.Y. 220, 6 Trans. App. 132 (N.Y. 1868).

Opinion

*134 Bacon, J.

If the charge of the learned Judge upon the trial had stopped at the first proposition enunciated by him, it is possible the verdict might be upheld, because it may, perhaps, be said, that there is some evidence from which the jury might possibly have found that Jerome was the owner of the note in 1858, when it is claimed that he sold it to Leland. The uncontradicted, and, indeed, overwhelming evidence is, that in December, 1857, the note in controversy was sold and delivered to Edwin C. Litchfield, who held it as owner from that time until August or September, 1860, when he sold and transferred it to Jerome, who soon after disposed of it to Elisha B. Litchfield, from whom the Plaintiffs derive their title. It is quite likely that in the transaction between Jerome and Leland, which occurred in the fall of 1858, both parties supposed that this note was among the bundle of securities that were traded off for the wild land; but it is as nearly certain as it can well be rendered by testimony that Jerome had not then either the possession or ownership of the note; and it can hardly be claimed that the jury, if that naked proposition had been left to them upon the testimony, could have found any such facts. The utmost that can be insisted the testimony conduces to prove, it seems to me, is, that Jerome agreed to sell this note, with others, in exchange for the land; that the other notes were handed to the clerk of Jerome, or to J eróme himself, who held them as the depositary of Leland, but that this note was not among the number, and was never in the possession of Leland, or that of his agent.

Assuming this to be the state of the case, the jury were instructed that if they believed that Jerome sold — that is, in effect agreed to sell — this note to Leland, although he was not the owner at the time of this agreement, yet, as he afterwards became the owner, his agreement implied a warrantee of title, and this subsequently acquired title enures to the benefit of Leland, his vendee, and payment to him extinguished the note. Upon this proposition the jury were authorized to find, as they did, a verdict for the Defendant; and the question is, whether the proposition is sound in law- — in other words, is there an implied warrantee of title in the sale of a chattel where the owner is not in possession ?

*135 It is to be assumed that there was an express affirmation of title by Jerome to Leland.

There was on the one hand, a sale of wild lands, and on the other, a sale and transfer by delivery of certain notes, and an agreement to sell another note, hut of which no assignment or delivery was made, and no written transfer executed, purporting to convey a present interest or one in future.

On this precise question — as to the implication of a warrantee on the sale of a chattel not in possession of the vendor at the time— Chancellor Kent, in his Commentaries, states the doctrine without qualification' to be, that the rule of caveat emptor applies, and the party buys at his peril (2 Kent’s Com. 418). He adds that, “ if the seller has possession of the article, and sells it as his own, and not as agent for another, and for a fair price, he is understood to warrant the title.” In support of the rule as thus stated, he cites two or three old cases in the English books. The first is the remark of Tanfield, Chief Baron, in Cro. Jac. 197, to the effect that, if one sell land whereof another is in possession, or a horse whereof another is in possession, without covenant or warrantee for the enjoyment, it is at the peril of him who buys, and it is not reason that he should have an action at the law, where he did not provide for himself. In Medina v. Stoughton (1 Salk. 210), Holt, C. J., decided that, where one having possession of a chattel sells it, the affirmation that it is his amounts to a warrantee; hut aliter where the seller is out of possession, for there may be room to question the seller’s title, and caveat emptor in such case to have either an express warrantee or a good title. These cases seem to have settled the law in England in conformity with the principle laid down by Kent, and we have been cited to no authority doubting or questioning them, unless such an. inference may arise from the remark of Buller in Pasley v. Ereeman (3 Term Rep. 58), which, however, is merely to the effect that, if the seller affirms the chattel not in his possession to be his, he is bound to answer for the title, for, in such case, the vendee has nothing else to rely upon. This places the liability upon the ground of an affirmation amounting to a warrantee, and is not at all ineon- *136 sistent with the principle enunciated in tbe two cases on which the rule, as stated by Kent, is formed.'

In this State the same question was presented, and is very fully discussed, both on principle and authority, in the case of McCoy v. Artcher (3 Barb. 323). The effect upon the question of war-rantee of title upon a sale, where the property is in or out of the possession of the vendor, is there considered, and the propositions are established, that possession by a vendor of chattels is equivalent to an affirmation of title; and in such case the vendor is held to an implied warrantee of title, even although nothing be said on the subject between the parties. But, if the property sold be, at the time of the sale, in the possession of a third party, and there be no affirmation, or assertion of ownership, no warrantee of title will be implied. In these circumstances, in order to attach any liability to the vendor upon a sale, thei’e must be an affirmation which will amount to a warrantee of the title.

The principle established by this case is followed, and affirmed in Edick v. Crim (10 Barb. 415), where the Court cites the case in Cro. Jac. 197, and say the general rule is, that though the vendor of a chattel impliedly warrants the title, yet, when the chattel is not in the vendor’s possession, but in that of another, this rule does not prevail. In Hopkins v. Grinnell (28 Barb. 533), where the same point arose, the decision was to the same effect, and the' proposition, in the terms laid down by Kent, was reiterated and approved.

It is not important to cite authorities from other States, several of which are quoted in the opinion of the Court in the case of McCoy v. Artcher, and are to the same effect. These cases in our own Courts settle the doctrine with us, from-which there has been no dissent from the earliest case to the present time. The effect of these decisions is sought to be evaded by the assertion of the Defendant’s counsel that, in'these cases, the vendor had had possession of the things sold, either before or after the sale, while Jerome not only had possession before he sold, but afterwards. It is not perceived how this fact, conceding it to exist, can vary the principle. The counsel in this part of the" argument also insists *137 that J eróme was the owner, and had possession of the note when he sold it. If this were conceded the argument would be at an end, and the proposition we have been employed with immaterial.

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Bluebook (online)
39 N.Y. 220, 6 Trans. App. 132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scranton-v-clark-ny-1868.