Watertown Steam Engine Co. v. Davis

10 Del. 192
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedJuly 5, 1877
StatusPublished

This text of 10 Del. 192 (Watertown Steam Engine Co. v. Davis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Watertown Steam Engine Co. v. Davis, 10 Del. 192 (Del. Ct. App. 1877).

Opinion

The Court,

Comegys, C.

charged the jury: The Watertown Steam Engine Company, the plaintiffs in the action, was a foreign corporation created by the State of New York, and had its place of business at Watertown in that State, which was the manufacture of stationary engines, iron frame saw-mills, and the necessary fixtures and appurtenances thereunto belonging. In the latter part of the year of 1872 or the early part of 1873, Solomon Holmes, now deceased, but then living in Milford, in this county, entered into a negotiation with George S. Grier, one of the witnesses in this case, and then an agent of the said company in this State, for the purchase of a stationary steam engine and iron frame saw-mill and the machinery and fixtures accompanying them; and it was agreed between them that such an engine and saw-mill should be sold to him by the company on his promising to pay for them the sum of two thousand four hundred and seventy-five dollars as follows : five hundred dollars in cash on delivery and the balance in notes, one of which was to be for five hundred dollars at three months, another for a like sum at six months, and the residue in other notes, the longest period for the payment of which was twelve months. Upon this the mill was ordered, and in the latter part of February, 1873, was received and delivered by the agent to which it was consigned by the plaintiffs, and was erected at once for use upon the real estate of the said Holmes, which was a lot of ground he had purchased in fee simple from the defendant, James B. Davis, by a deed duly executed and delivered and bearing date the 1st day of January, 1873. When the money was paid by Holmes to Grier, the agent, does not appear, but the ■ notes bear date respectively the 1st day of *202 March, 1873, and before that time the mill was delivered to the former and erected by him upon the Davis lot. About these facts there seems to be no controversy whatever, and they may therefore be taken to be absolutely true. Grier states in his testimony that he forwarded the money and notes to the plaintiffs, who kept the former, but refused to accept the latter unless he, their agent, would indorse them ; that he declined to do so as to make himself individually liable for them, but did write his name upon the back of them as agent. The plaintiffs refused to accept them in that form, but in lieu of them required Holmes to sign the writing in proof before you, in which he acknowledges the receipt of the articles, the price to be paid for them,' the giving his own notes for the balance (one thousand nine hundred and seventy-five dollars) of the purchase-money, and then consents that in case the notes or any of them are not paid at their maturity the company may enter upon his (Holmes’) premises, repossess themselves of the mill, etc., and that he will pay them a reasonable price or sum for such use of them as he has made. This, we think, may be fairly assumed to be true also. We see no reason to doubt the correctness of this part of Grier’s testimony, and the writing is before you, is unambiguous in its terms, and speaks for itself. It is also an undisputed fact that the first of the notes was paid when it fell due— thus passing into the plaintiffs’ hands, with what was at the time of the delivery of the goods paid in cash, one thousand dollars of the purchase price and reducing the indebtedness to the sum of one thousand four hundred and seventy-five dollars with interest added. The other notes matured in due time, the latest on the 1st and 4th of March, 1874, and were none of them paid. On the 18th day of September following, near seven months thereafter, Holmes died, the owner still of the lot purchased from Davis upon which the mill had been erected, and afterward letters of administration upon his estate were granted by the register of Kent County to D. O. K. Strong (Dr. Strong, as he was called), a witness on the part of the plaintiffs. After the grant of administration the administrator hired the mill to parties and collected the rent thereof until he ceased to have any interest in the matter, which was after the sheriff’s sale of the *203 premises now to be spoken of. This sale was made on the 7th day of April, 1875, by Peter L. Cooper, Esq., then sheriff of said county of Kent, by virtue of a writ of levari facias in his hands at the suit of the defendant, James B. Davis, from whom Holmes had, as before stated, purchased the lot upon which the mill was erected, the purchase-money being the sum of six hundred dollars, no part of which was ever paid by the latter, but who settled it by his mortgage of the lot to Davis, the defendant; the deed bears date the 1st day of January, 1873, but the mortgage is dated on the 5th. After the death of Holmes, viz.: on the 18th day of September, 1874, Davis proceeded upon his mortgage for foreclosure and sale of the lot sold to Holmes, obtained judgment against the representatives of the latter (the administrator, Dr. Strong, being one of the defendants), and issued the writ of levari facias, upon which sale was made as aforesaid on the ensuing 7th of April and was bought by Davis. Afterward in the month of August following, the property in dispute here was sold by virtue of an execution in the hands of Sheriff Williamson at the suit of the said George S. Grier against Holmes and was purchased'for a nominal sum by said Grier; but it is an undisputed fact that at this latter sale, four months after the sale of the lot by Davis, the property sold was claimed by the plaintiffs as belonging to them and the sale forbidden, and was also claimed by the defendant under his deed from the sheriff of the lot sold under his mortgage, and the sale forbidden also. There was no attempt by Grier to take away the property bought by him. When the sale was over, or at or about the time it was made, formal demand of the delivery of the property was made of the defendant by an agent of the plaintiffs and delivery was refused, and this action of trover was brought for the conversion of it. There can be no mistake about all these facts: they are each and every one of them true, except it may be so far as they depend alone upon the testimony of Grier; and we do not understand that there is any denial of the truth of that part of his testimony above referred to—that is, his communication with the plaintiffs in the treaty of purchase, etc.

From the foregoing statement it results as a consequence that *204 if the mill in question (and when the term mill alone is mentioned we intend by it not only the saw-mill proper but the engine, boiler, and all the other machinery or apparatus) remained in law the property of the plaintiffs up to the time of the demand of it from Davis (upon whose land therefore, under the circumstances, and in whose custody it was) and his refusal to deliver it up, then the plaintiffs have a clear right of action in the form of trover by them adopted, and are entitled to recover from the defendant by way of damages the value they have proved it to have had at the time of the demand and refusal, with further damages to be added of such sums as shall be equal to the interest on its proved value from the time of the refusal till the rendition of your verdict—provided the aggregate of these sums shall not exceed one thousand seven hundred dollars with interest, which they have announced by their counsel before you to be the limit of their demand.

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Bluebook (online)
10 Del. 192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watertown-steam-engine-co-v-davis-delsuperct-1877.