Smith v. B. Lynes & Thompson & Co.

3 Sandf. 203
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedOctober 6, 1849
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 3 Sandf. 203 (Smith v. B. Lynes & Thompson & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. B. Lynes & Thompson & Co., 3 Sandf. 203 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1849).

Opinion

By the Court. Sandford, J.

We have frequently decided the principal question involved in these cases, and have supposed the law applicable to it, was perfectly established in this state. [208]*208The plaintiff’s counsel relied upon the case of Russell v. Minor, (22 Wend. 656,) as deciding a different rule from that enforced at the trial, and we have examined the subject anew, with the view of putting it at rest, so far as this court is concerned.

The question arises upon the delivery of goods, which have been sold conditionally, as for cash or for indorsed notes. The fact that the sale was conditional, is not at all conclusive; for, however numerous the conditions of the sale, if the vendor deliver the goods absolutely to the ptuchaser, the title vests in the latter. On a frill consideration of the matter, we are satisfied that the well-settled rule of law is this:—Where goods are sold, to be paid for on delivery, either in cash or commercial paper, and the goods are delivered without exacting the money or the securities, such delivery is absolute, and a complete title vests in the purchaser, unless the delivery was procured by fraud.

A mere expectation that the buyer will comply with the terms of the sale, does not qualify the delivery or affect its character. Such expectation exists in every sale, conditional or otherwise. If the seller intend to make the delivery conditional, he must do it in express terms. The very act of delivering the goods without at the same time obtaining the stipulated payment or security, imports a waiver of the terms of the sale. The seller cannot, when doing that act, rely upon his mental reservation that he still looks for a performance of the condition, and does not intend to pass the title of the goods.

There is no hardship in this principle of law. If the seller is unwilling to trust to the personal responsibility of the buyer for the performance of the terms of the sale, it is only necessary for bim either to refuse to deliver without- a simultaneous performance, or to attach the express condition to the delivery. In the latter event he will be safe, except against hon& fide purchasers without notice. A contrary rule world lead to great confusion, as is the tendency of every deviation from the general principle that the possession of personal property is evidence of title.

In Chapman v. Lathrop (6 Cowen 110,) the supreme court held the title to have passed by the delivery, on a sale made for cash; the goods having been removed by the buyer to his own [209]*209store without payment, -and without any express condition or reservation, although payment was demanded on the following day.

In Lupin v. Marie, (6 Wend. 77,) which was in the court for the correction of errors, the goods were sold on the 24th of August, to be paid for in notes of the buyer, and were delivered the next day without the notes being exacted or given. The buyer failed on the fourth of September, and on the fifth the seller demanded the goods, claiming that the delivery had been conditional, and the title had not passed. On the ninth of September, the seller assigned the goods, with his other property, for the benefit of his creditors. The court decided that the delivery without requiring the notes, or annexing any condition, was a waiver of the condition on which the sale was made; the buyer became the absolute owner of the goods, and the title passed to his voluntary assignee.

In Furniss v Hone, (8 Wend. 247,) in the same court, where on a sale of goods at auction, the sellers failed to prove that the delivery was on the condition claimed by them, it was decided that the same was absolute, and the title vested in the buyer. Mr. Justice Kelson, and Senator W. H. Maynard, in their opinions, affirmed the general doctrine which we have laid down.

In the case of The People v. Haynes, in the same court, (14 Wend. 546,) the chancellor said, that where goods are sold upon the understanding that they are to be' paid for on delivery, if they aré delivered without insisting upon payment at the time of the delivery, the title passes absolutely to the purchaser, unless there is a special agreement, or a usage of trade, by which it is made conditional. Senator Tracy, in the same case, said if goods sold for securities, were actually delivered to the purchaser, without any arrangement as to the security for the payment, the vendor’s lien upon them was gone ; and to constitute a conditional delivery, it was necessary the condition should be express. The case before the court was not one of a conditional sale; but the positions laid down by the members of the court were pertinent to the conclusion adopted, which was unanimous.

[210]*210Chancellor Kent fully concurs in this doctrine as to the effect of delivery. It is true he makes an exception upon usage in particular cases, and speaks of the seller’s exacting or expecting payment as qualifying a delivery; but it is evident from the illustrations which follow, that the learned commentator had in view an expectation, expressed at the time, and attached to the act of delivery. Indeed, no other could have been supposed; for an expectation locked up in the seller’s own bosom could have no possible influence upon his act in delivering, even with the buyer’s title or right thereby acquired. (2 Kent’s Comm. 496.)

The plaintiffs referred to Haggerty v. Palmer, 6 John. Ch. R. 437, and Keeler v. Field, 1 Paige, 312. In the former the delivery was held to be conditional, upon the force of a usage admitted to exist, known to the buyer and to his assignee, and the force of it not called in question. In Keeler v. Field there was an express condition annexed to the shipment and delivery of the goods.

The case of Russell v. Minor, 22 Wend. 659, was this :— Minor had contracted for a quantity of paper, for which he was to give his note. A part of the paper was brought to him, and he was asked for his note for the price of that portion. He declined giving it until the residue was delivered, when he would give his note.for the whole; but he said the parcel brought could remain until then. When the residue was offered he would not give his note, and replevin was brought for the parcel first delivered. The supreme court nonsuited the plaintiff, and the court of errors reversed the judgment, by a divided court, and against the opinion of the chancellor and Senators Maynard and Verplanck. The majority of the court held that the partial delivery was conditional, because of Minor’s express promise at the time to give a note when the residue was delivered. This, it will be observed, was an express condition proposed by the buyer in answer to the seller’s demand of a note as a term of the delivery. It, therefore, does not conflict with the position that there must be an express condition annexed to, or qualifying the act of delivery, to prevent it from vesting the title. Another good reason existed in that case for holding the delivery [211]*211to have been conditional, in the fact that it was not a full performance of the seller’s contract, (which was to make a single delivery of the entire quantity at once,) and it was received and accepted conditionally by the buyer. He simply suffered the paper to be left, and to remain until the residue was brought, and the contract thereby performed.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Sandf. 203, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-b-lynes-thompson-co-nysuperctnyc-1849.