The St. Joze Indiano
This text of 14 U.S. 208 (The St. Joze Indiano) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
delivered the opinion of the court, and, after stating the facts, proceeded as follows:
The single question presented on these facts is, in whom the property was vested at the time of its transit; if in Mr. Lizaur, then it is to be restored; if in the shippers, then it is to be condemned. It is contended, in behalf of the claimant, that the goods having been purchased by the order, and partly with the funds, of Mr. Lizaur, the property vested in him immediately by the purchase,: and the contract being executed by the salé, no delivery was necessary to perfect the legal title: that nothing was reserved to the shippers but a mere .rjght of stoppage in transitu, and that if they had been burnt before the shipment, or lost during the Voyage, the loss must have fallen on Mr. Lizaur.,
*212 The doctrine as to the right of stoppage in transi tu,. cannot apply to this case. That right exists in the single casé of insolvency, and presupposes, not fcnly that the property'has passed to the consignee, but that the possession is in a third person in the transit to the consignee. It cannot, therefore, touch a case where the actual or constructive possession still remains in the shipper or his exclusive agents. In general, the rules of the prize court, as to the. vesting of property, aré the same with those of the common law, by which the thing sold, after the completion of the contract, is properly at the, risk of the purchaser. f But the question still, reeurs, ■Wheri is the contract executed ? It is certainly competent for an agent abroad, who purchases in pursuance of orders, to vest the property in his principal immediately on the purchase. This is the case when he purchases exclusively on the credit'of his principal, or makes an absolute appropriation and *213 designation of the property for his principal. But where a merchant abroad, in pursuance of orders. either sells his own goods, or purchases goods on his own credit, (and thereby, in reality, becomes the owner,) no property in the goods vests in his correspondent until he has done some notorious act to devest himself of his title, or has parted with the possession by air actual and unconditional-delivery for the use of such correspondent. Until that time .he has in legal contemplation the. exclusive property, as well as possession; and it is not a wrongful act in him to convert them to any use which he pleases. He is at liberty to contract upon Any new engagements, or substitute any new conditions in relation to the shipment; These principles have been frequently recognised in prize causes heretofore decided in this court. g In the present case, the delivery to the master was not for the use of Mr. Lizaur, but for the consignees, a house composed of the same per-
*214 sons as the shippers, and acting as their agents. They, therefore, retained the constructive possession, as well as right of property, in the shippers} and it jg apparent from the letter, that tile shippers meant to reserve to themselves and to their agents, in relation to the shipment, all those powers which ownership gives over property. It. is material, also, in this view, that all the papers, respecting the shipment, were addressed to their own house, or to a house acting as their agents, and the claimants could have, no knowledge or control of the shipment, unless by the con snt of the consignees, under future . arrangements to be dictated by them. In this view this case cannot be distinguished from that of Messrs. Kim-' mell and Alvers; and it steers wide' of the distinction upon which Messrs. Wilkins’ claim was sustained. h The authorities also cited at the argument by the captors are exceedingly strong to, the same effect.. The Aurora i approaches very near to the present, case. There the shipment, by the express. agreement of the parties, was, in reality, going for the use, and by the order, of the purchaser, but consigned to other persons, who were to deliver them if they were satisfied for the payment. And Sir William' Scott there quotes a case as having been lately decided, where goods sent by a.merchant in Holland, to A., a person in America;, by. order, and for account, of B., with directions not to deliver them unless satisfaction should be given for the payment, were condemned-as the property of the Dutch shippers.
*215 On the whole, the court are unanimously, of opinion, that the goods included in this shipment were, ° .. i i • i ~ during them transit, the property, and at the risk oí the shippers, and, therefore, subject to condemnation. The claim of Mr. Lizaur must,' therefore, be rejected.
Sentence affirmed with costs.
By the common law, the right of property in the thing sold is completely vested in. the purchaser ]by the execution of the contract, subject to the equitable right of stoppage in transitu in case of insolvency,-and where the bill of lading has no.t been, in the me.an time, endorsed to a third person, But by the civil law, the right of property was not vested in the purchaser, unless the goods were paid for, or sold on a credit. Just. 1. 2. tit. 1. s. 41. Pothier Traite de Vente, No. 322. .But this rule is Hqt copied by the Napoleon Code, which, on the contrary, adopts a principle similar to that of the common law: Elle {la vente) est parfaite entre les parties, et la propriété est acquise de droit a l’egard du vendeur,- des.qu’on est cónvenu de la chose et dupríx, quoique la chose n’ait pas .encore été livrée ni le prix payé. Code Napoleon, 1. 3, tit. 6. c. 1. No. 1583. The French .Commercial Code also subjects the goods sold to the right of stoppage in transitu, by the yendor, upon the same conditions with our own law. Code de Commercej T. 3. tit. 3.' J3e la Mevcndicaiion,
In the Venus, at February term, 1814, on the claim of Messrs. Magee & Jones, Mr. Justice Washington, in delivering the opinion 01 the court, observed í “ To effect a change of property, as between seller and buyer, it is essential that there should be a contract of sale agreed to by "both parties, arjd if the thing agreed to be purchased is to be sent by the vendor to the vendee, it is necessary to the perfection of the con.ract that it should be delivered n
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14 U.S. 208, 4 L. Ed. 73, 1 Wheat. 208, 1816 U.S. LEXIS 323, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-st-joze-indiano-scotus-1816.