Singleton v. State

81 S.E. 596, 14 Ga. App. 527, 1914 Ga. App. LEXIS 363
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedApril 30, 1914
Docket5472
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 81 S.E. 596 (Singleton v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Singleton v. State, 81 S.E. 596, 14 Ga. App. 527, 1914 Ga. App. LEXIS 363 (Ga. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

Russell, C. J.

Singleton was convicted of a violation of section 722 of the Penal Code, which declares that “When a person holds personal property under.a conditional purchase and sale, and by the terms of the purchase the title is retained by the vendor until the purchase-price is paid, he shall not, without the consent or approval of the vendor, sell or encumber the property with intent to defraud the vendor or defeat his rights, or when such selling or encumbering the property tends to the injury of the vendor. A violation of this section shall be a misdemeanor.” ' He sued out certiorari, and- he excepts to the judgment overruling the certiorari. There was evidence in behalf of the prosecution that the watch which the accused had purchased under the written contract reserving title in the vendor was sold by him to a third person, but there was evidence to,the effect that instead of selling it, he merely deposited it as a. pledge to secure an indebtedness for money advanced. Upon the issue as to the bona tides of the defendant in the transaction, a verdict either way would have been supported; but in the view that we take of the case, this is immaterial. The prime question raised in the court below, and now presented for our eonsideratign, is whether the evidence established the existence of a subsisting, valid, legal contract, for the violation of which the defendant could be subjected to the penalties imposed by section 722 [529]*529of the Penal Code. Under the provisions of 'that section it is as indispensable to show that there was a written contract authorizing the vendor to retain the title as it is to prove any other ingredient of the offense. In fact, proof of the contract is the basis upon which the prosecution is compelled to rest. If the vendor does not retain the title, it passes by delivery to the purchaser of the chattel, and no law prohibits his disposing of the property as he may see fit. The provisions of this section of the Penal Code were especially designed for the purpose of protecting the rights of the 'Vendor in all instances where, by contract, his purchase-money is secured by reservation of the title; and if he has taken such a contract, the sale or incumbering of the property mentioned in the contract, without his consent, and with intent to defraud him, subjects the' vendee to prosecution. There can be no reservation of title without the contract; there can be no prosecution for disposing of the property unless the title has been legally retained; and hence, no contract, no conviction. One of the essential requisites to the making of a contract is that the parties shall be capable of contracting. If either party to the proposed contract is by law wholly incapable of contracting, the effort to contract is generally an absolute nullity. In some instances one who at the time of the execution of the writing is incapable may adopt the contract at the termination of his disability; but one whom the law declares to be incapable of executing a contract can not make a valid, legal contract; nor can a contract be valid when made by one whom the law has forbidden to make it and subjects to punishment if it is made upon terms other than those prescribed by law.

The record in the present case discloses that the circumstances surrounding the execution of the purported contract are not in dispute. The accused was on Peters street, in the city of Atlanta, one Saturday night. He was accosted by another negro, who asked him if he did not want to buy a watch. He was taken by this negro a short distance up the street, and presented to one W. L. Manning, who testifies that it was dark, but that the street lights were burning; that he (Manning) had several watches with him to be sold for Jones & Phillips, a corporation in the jewelry business; that a colored boy brought the defendant to him, and that he sold to the defendant a watch on the street, and took him into a beer saloon, where the defendant signed the printed contract of conditional sale. [530]*530The purchaser paid $2 down at the time. Manning testified that he “did not do anything particularly” after selling the watch to the defendant. He did not read the contract to the defendant, and did not know whether the defendant knew what he was signing or not. “I took him in a saloon.” “I just told him to come with me and sign it.” There was proof from a witness for the State that the defendant made a few other payments, of $1 each, upon the watch, and also proof that before paying the purchase-price in full the defendant sold the watch to one Will Bostwick. Manning testified that he had paid no special tax as a jewelry peddler, and had not registered in the office of the ordinary of Fulton county; but he testified that' the corporation for which he "was selling watches upon the streets had paid the license. He was the only witness who testified on this point.

Hnder the foregoing testimony the conviction of the accused was not authorized by law. Clearly Manning was a peddler at the time of the sale of the watch and of the execution of the conditional contract of sale, upon the validity of which the success of the prosecution depended. According to his own statement he was carrying with him a number of watches, for the purpose of selling them upon the streets, and it is plain that the transaction under review was only one of many similar transactions of daily occurrence.

A peddler is one who goes from place to place exhibiting his wares and actually selling them whenever he finds the opportunity. Kimmell v. Americus, 105 Ga. 694 (31 S. E. 623). “Thé leading primary idea of a hawker or peddler is that of an itinerant or traveling trader who carries goods about in order to sell them, and who actually sells them to purchasers, in contradistinction to a trader who has goods for sale and sells them in a fixed place of business.” Gould v. Atlanta, 55 Ga. 689, quoting from Shaw, C. J., in Commonwealth v. Ober, 12 Cush. 195. For other definitions see Wrought Iron Range Co. v. Johnson, 84 Ga. 754 (11 S. E. 233, 8 L. R. A. 273); Ezell v. Thrasher, 76 Ga. 817 (30 S. E. 755); Duncan v. State, 105 Ga. 457 (30 S. E. 755); McClelland, v. Marietta, 96 Ga. 749 (22 S. E. 329). In Wrought Iron Range Co. v. Johnson, supra, it was held that one whose vocation is to go from place to place with a sample stove, for the purpose of exhibition and to procure orders, though the orders aré afterwards filled by his employers, and the stoves thus ordered are delivered by other agents, [531]*531is a peddler. But it is not necessary for us to place our decision upon the rulings in these two eases, for in the case sub judice the entire transaction, including delivery of the article purchased, was completed upon the spot. Black’s Law Dictionary defines "peddlers” as "itinerant traders; persons who sell small wares which they carry with them in traveling about from place to place.’ Persons, except those peddling newspapers, Bibles, or religious tracts, who sell or offer to sell, at retail, goods, wares, or other commodities, traveling from place to place in the street, or through different parts of the country.” In perhaps the latest adjudication of the Supreme Court in which the term "peddler” is defined (Smith v. Whidden, 138 Ga. 471, 75 S. E.

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Bluebook (online)
81 S.E. 596, 14 Ga. App. 527, 1914 Ga. App. LEXIS 363, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/singleton-v-state-gactapp-1914.