Ward Land & Stock Co. v. Mapes

82 P. 426, 147 Cal. 747, 1905 Cal. LEXIS 464
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 19, 1905
DocketSac. No. 1167.
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 82 P. 426 (Ward Land & Stock Co. v. Mapes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ward Land & Stock Co. v. Mapes, 82 P. 426, 147 Cal. 747, 1905 Cal. LEXIS 464 (Cal. 1905).

Opinion

VAN DYKE, J.

This action was brought to recover the alleged value of cattle sold to the defendant on execution as. the property of E. H. Hamlin, Jr. The plaintiff claimed that the cattle so sold belonged to it, whereas the defendant claimed that the cattle belonged to Hamlin. The verdict in the court below went for the plaintiff, in the sum o„f $4,358.72 1/6, for which sum judgment was thereupon rendered, together with interest and costs. The appeal was taken from the judgment within sixty days upon a bill of exceptions containing the-evidence. The plaintiff is a corporation organized in the state, of Nevada, engaged in the business of raising and selling livestock, particularly cattle. The corporation was managed and controlled byO. W. and A. M. Ward.

In the latter part of the winter of 1900-1901, the plaintiff brought two bunches of cattle to Honey Lake Valley, Lassen County, this state, to be fed for beef and sold. E. H. Hamlin was then engaged in buying beef cattle as the agent of W. & P. Nichols, bankers, of Dutch Flat, Placer County, California, the cattle to be disposed of by Hamlin in certain markets controlled by him. In order to meet the demands of his market it was necessary for Hamlin to secure cattle ahead, place them on feed, and be prepared to meet the demands of his market as they arose. Plaintiff made an agreement with Hamlin in reference to the sale of cattle, and set a price upon the cattle of different grades, arid Hamlin agreed to pay for the feeding of the cattle, and was to have the right to take the cattle out for market in such numbers as he desired, as his needs required; but it is claimed on the part of the plaintiff and respondent that under the agreement made between it and Hamlin, before he took any cattle out of the corral, he should place a check covering the value of the cattle taken out in the Nevada Bank at Reno, Nevada, or pay the amount to one of the Ward brothers; and that it was agreed that the. title to the cattle was at all times to remain in the plaintiff until payment was made by Hamlin, as stated. Hamlin became indebted to the defendant on account of feed sold to him, and thé defendant supposing the cattle in ques *749 -fcion to have .been . bought by Hamlin from the plaintiff, and that they were Hamlin’s cattle, in an action based ■on such indebtedness the cattle were attached and after judgment recovered were sold upon execution,' as already .stated.

The contention on the part of the appellant is, that the sale •of the cattle by the plaintiff to Hamlin was an absolute sale, .and they, therefore, became the property of Hamlin, notwithstanding the purchase price had not been paid. On the trial, in Hamlin’s testimony, he says: “I made no agree.ment to pay for these cattle in ease I did not take them,” and O. W. Ward, one of the managers of the plaintiff, says: '“He agreed to pay for them if he took them.” Whether "the transaction between the plaintiff and Hamlin amounted "to an absolute sale of the cattle, or was a mere agreement to :sell, generally termed a conditional sale, was a question to be ascertained and found by the jury from the evidence produced at the trial. “An agreement to sell is a contract by which one engages, for a price, to transfer to another the title to a certain thing.” (Civ. Code, sec. 1727.) It is •shown in this case that the plaintiff and Hamlin agreed upon the price of the different grades of stock to be sold, and that when the prices thus fixed should be paid by Hamlin then .such stock so paid for, became his. A similar question arose in Van Allen v. Francis, 123 Cal. 474, [56 Pac. 339], and the •court in discussing that case says: “The nature of the contract between plaintiffs and Van Allen first invites consideration. By appellant it is insisted that it shows an absolute • .sale of the property; by respondent, that the contract is one of conditional sale. We think the latter construction is the true one. Conditional sales are recognized in this state to the fullest extent [citing a long list of cases]. And it is well •settled that even bona fide purchasers from the person to whom the personal property is delivered under an executory •contract of sale get no valid claim to the property” (citing cases). Benjamin on Sales, 320, says: “Where the buyer is by. contract bound to do anything as a condition either precedent or concurrent on which the passing of the property •depends, the property will- not pass until the condition be fulfilled, even though the goods may have been actually delivered into the possession of the buyer.” Without reviewing *750 the evidence in detail in this case, it is enough to say that it, is sufficient to support the verdict.

Appellant’s counsel in his brief takes exception to instructions given by the court numbered 4, 5, 7, and 8. It is contended that the definition of a conditional sale given in some-of these instructions is too broad and conflicts with that given, in the others, and that the phrase “conditional sale” is used, in others without qualification or definition, and that, consequently, the instructions were misleading and could only-have served the purpose of mystifying the jury. It may be-conceded that if the case involved a contract of sale containing conditions not affecting, or not preventing, an immediate-transfer of the title, and there had been on the trial a controversy over some such conditions, some of the instructions: given would have been confusing, and possibly erroneous.. But the only condition of the contract of sale in question: which was at all important, or about which there was any controversy at the trial, was the condition that the title to-the cattle should not pass to Hamlin until the price was paid or secured. The question of the existence of this condition-was the decisive point of fact in the case to be decided by the jury. Concerning this the court, in instruction 7, properly instructed the jury as follows: “7. If you find from the evidence that the sale of the cattle by plaintiff to Hamlin, was intended, agreed and understood to be a conditional sale,, and that the title to the cattle was not to pass or vest absolutely or unconditionally in Hamlin, then you should find for plaintiff. But if you find from the evidence that it was; intended, agreed and understood by plaintiff. and Hamlin that the title to the cattle was to pass to and vest in Hamlin absolutely and unconditionally, then you should find for the-defendant.” In view of the issues and the evidence given at the trial all the references to a “conditional sale” in the other instructions must have been intended by the court, and would necessarily have been understood by the jury, to refer to the condition concerning the transfer of title, which had been the chief subject of dispute. When so understood, all the instructions on the subject were substantially correct. It must be presumed that the jury was composed of intelligent: men, and as such, they could easily understand the distinction between an absolute sale and one with a condition to be-. *751 complied with before the title passed, to which their attention was called by the instructions.

It is also contended by appellant’s counsel that the court erred in refusing to give the following instruction No. 3 asked by defendant: “3d.

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Bluebook (online)
82 P. 426, 147 Cal. 747, 1905 Cal. LEXIS 464, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ward-land-stock-co-v-mapes-cal-1905.