Taylor v. Tillotson

16 Wend. 494
CourtCourt for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors
DecidedDecember 15, 1836
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 16 Wend. 494 (Taylor v. Tillotson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taylor v. Tillotson, 16 Wend. 494 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1836).

Opinion

By the Chancellor.

The declaration in the original suit in this case before the justice was certainly very imperfect; and if the action had originated in a court of record, /I think it must have been considered fatally defective on a general demurrer, or upon a motion in arrest of judgment, particularly as it did not allege that the horse was injured or rendered less valuable in consequence of his fright and running away, or that the defendant was aware that those circumstances would injure the horse or render him less valuable to the owner than he was before. The action was for a deceit in inducing the plaintiff to take back the horse and refund the purchase money, by a .misrepresentation or fraudulent concealment of the fact that the horse had been injured and rendered less valuable in consequence of his having been frightened and running away with the waggon. It was necessary, therefore, that the plaintiff should allege and prove that the horse would be thus injured by the fright and running away, and that the defendant knew it would have that effect. For if the defendant was not aware of [500]*500the fact that what had occurred in consequence of the accident wou]j ¡njure the horse, there could not have been any fraudulent concealment in the case. But as pleadings in justices’ courts are always informal, and will seldom bear the test of legal scrutiny; as there is no doubt that the parties went to trial, especially in the common pleas upon the appeal, with a sufficient knowledge of what was the real subject of controversy in the suit, and as there was no motion in arrest of judgment from any thing that appears in the case, 1 am disposed to pass over the defects in the declaration, and examine the question in controversy upon its merits.

I cannot concur with the counsel for the plaintiff in error that under such an agreement for a conditional sale as was made in this case, the horse was at the risk of the vendor during the period allowed to Taylor to return him if he did not suit, and receive back his money. It was not a case of bailment merely; for by the conditional sale and •delivery of the horse to the purchaser, and the payment of the purchase money, the title of the property for the time was completely vested in the purchaser, subject to be divested, however, by the exercise of his right of election at the end of the prescribed period to return the horse and to receive back the purchase money. In this respect the case is materially different from that of De Fondear v. Shottenkirk, 3 Johns. Rep. 170, to which we are referred by the counsel for the plaintiff in error upon the argument. In that case there was a mere negotiation for a sale, or at most a sale upon a suspensive condition ; so that the bargain itself was not complete, as the purchaser had not paid or agreed to pay any particular amount of purchase money. Although the price was named by De Fondear, the time and manner of payment was not definitely fixed upon; and Shottenkirk had not absolutely agreed to pay the price asked, if the slave was not returned at the end of any prescribed period. He merely took him upon trial, to see if the negro would be satisfied to remain with him as his master if he thought fit to complete the bargain for his purchase. It was therefore a case in which either party might have [501]*501resiled from the contract or broken off the negotiation at any time before Shottenkirk had agreed to accept the offer of De Fondear to sell for the price specified. The contract in the present case was one which is very uncommon here, inasmuch as the purchase money was actually paid at the time the horse was received on trial. It was, therefore, what in the civil law is called a sale upon a condition dissolutory ; or more properly what, in the Mussulman law, is termed a condition of option ; that is, a sale which is complete and binding upon one party immediately, but with a stipulation as to the other that he shall have the option of adhering to the contract, or 'of rescinding the sale and annulling the contract within a certain specified time, and receiving or paying back the purchase money. It does not very satisfactorily appear what the rule of the civil law is upon the question as to who shall bear the loss of an injury happening to the property which is the subject of such a sale, without the fault of either party, during the time prescribed by the condition of option; and I have not been able to find any reported case, either in this country or in England, where this question has arisen and been settled. Domat says, if a thing is sold upon trial for a certain time on condition that it shall be no sale if it does not please the buyer, all the charges and the profit and loss which happen before or during the time of trial, the sale not being as yet accomplished, accrue to the seller, who is still the master. Domat, B. 1. tit. 2. § 7. art. 6. This language is general, and would seem to apply to cases of dissolutory as well as to suspensive conditions ; although it is inconsistent with the general rule of the civil law that when the bargain is complete, by the payment or security of the purchase money, the property is at the risk of the purchaser, whether it has or has not been delivered. But in the Spanish Partidas, which are founded upon the general principles of the civil law, it is said that where a condition is annexed to the sale, and the thing sold is deteriorated or ameliorated before the happening of the condition, the loss or profit will be on account of the buyer; and if the thing is lost or wholly destroyed, in whatever way it may happen, the loss will be on [502]*502account of the seller. In the Napoleon code, although a great variety of cases are provided for, I find no principle laid down which appears to reach the one now under consideration.. Neither does the question appear to have been settled by the law of Scotland ; although the principle that dissolving conditions are merely personal, and do not prevent the passing of the title, so as to render the sale absolute if the property has passed into the hands of third parties, or is attached bf creditors, seems to be wholly inconsistent with the idea that the property remains at the risk of the vendor during the time prescribed in the condition of option. See 1 Bell’s Comm. 239. By adverting, however, to the writings of a learned Sheikh, who compiled the extensive and valuable treatise on the Mussulman laws, called Al Redaya, or the Guide, more than six hundred years since, we find a principle laid down which is directly applicable to the case under consideration ; a stipulation of a condition of option on the part of the purchaser being common in sales in Mahommedan countries, being founded upon the advice of the Prophet himself to one of his companions and disciples who had frequently been taken in by purchasing without first seeing or trying the property purchased. The principle of the Mussulman law, as laid down by this learned commentator is, that if the condition of option is stipulated on the part of the purchaser, and the property is. injured, he is not permitted to return it, but must bear .the loss, as the option is thereby determined ; which is also the case where the property is wholly lost or destroyed. See 2 Hamilton’s Hedaya, B. 16. ch. 2. p. 384. Although this rule is found among the laws of semi-barbarians, it is one which is perfectly equitable and proper when applied to a case like the present, where there is an actual change of the possession of the property, in consequence of the conditional sale, and the purchase money has been paid or received.

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Bluebook (online)
16 Wend. 494, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-tillotson-nycterr-1836.