Western Mining Supply Co. v. Quinn

105 P. 732, 40 Mont. 156, 1909 Mont. LEXIS 158
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1909
DocketNo. 2,730
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 105 P. 732 (Western Mining Supply Co. v. Quinn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Western Mining Supply Co. v. Quinn, 105 P. 732, 40 Mont. 156, 1909 Mont. LEXIS 158 (Mo. 1909).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE HOLLOWAY

delivered the opinion of the-court.

This action was commenced by the plaintiff, a corporation, against John J. Quinn, the surety on his official bond as sheriff of Silver Bow county, and C. M. Parr, to recover damages for the conversion of certain goods and chattels alleged to belong to the plaintiff. The property consists of a warehouse and certain mining machinery, lumber, etc., which was seized by Quinn, the sheriff, on July 8, 1905, by virtue of a writ of attachment, issued in an action wherein Parr was plaintiff, and the Shackleton & Whiteway Construction Company was defendant, and afterward sold by order of the court. In the district court the defendants recovered judgment upon a general verdict in their-favor. The plaintiff moved for a new trial, which was granted, and the defendants appealed from the order.

1. It is contended that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The complaint alleges that. [160]*160at the time of the seizure of the property the predecessors of plaintiff were the owners and in possession of all the property, and that such property continued to be theirs until the sale thereof by defendant Quinn. While this pleading is not a model, we think it is sufficient. The seizure of one’s property to satisfy a claim of another is a conversion of the property, irrespective of the designation given such seizure in the complaint.

2. The plaintiff claims that its predecessors in interest purchased the property from the Shaekleton & Whiteway Construction Company before the seizure by Quinn. But it is urged by defendants that the evidence is insufficient to show such a delivery and change of possession as is necessary to satisfy our statute. The testimony discloses that the warehouse is personal property situated at 516 South Main street, Butte, on leased land, and that the other property was contained in the warehouse at the time of the seizure. It further discloses that on June 26, 1905, upon a sale of the property by the Shaekleton & Whiteway Construction Company to Farnham, Wright & Hale, the predecessors of this plaintiff, the construction company delivered up to Farnham the key to the warehouse, and thereafter did not exercise any ownership or control over any of the property. While this evidence is meager, it is held to be •sufficient by the authorities generally. In Dodge v. Jones, 7 Mont. 121, 14 Pac. 707, this court said: “No particular act or formal ceremony is necessary to make a delivery in law. Any act done, coupled with the intent to change the ownership, which has the effect to transfer the dominion over the thing sold to the buyer, is a delivery.” In that case it was held sufficient delivery and evidence of change of possession that the horses in question were gathered, a distinguishing brand placed upon them, and they then returned to their customary range. The ■subject was again considered at length by this court, and the doctrine of the Dodge Case approved, in Webster v. Sherman, 33 Mont. 448, 84 Pac. 878. It has been repeatedly said by the ¡courts that the acts which will amount to a delivery will vary •with the different cases, and will depend upon the character .and quantity of the property sold. (Lay v. Neville, 25 Cal. [161]*161546.) It is easy enough, to understand the meaning of the words “immediate delivery” as used in section 6128, Revised Codes, when applied to the sale, over the counter, of small articles of merchandise; but when one attempts to apply the same meaning to a sale of a kiln of hot bricks, or hay in the swath, stack, or mow, or a large quantity of ore in bins, he appreciates fully the difficulty in the way of establishing a hard-and-fast rule applicable to all cases. It is not now an open question that there may be such a constructive delivery as will fully satisfy the requirements of the statute; for the law does not demand impossibilities. In Sharp v. Carroll, 66 Wis. 62, 27 N. W. 832, it was held that the delivery by the vendor to the vendee of the key to the granary was a sufficient delivery of the wheat therein, which had been sold. The same thing is held in Kellogg Newspaper Co. v. Peterson, 162 Ill. 158, 53 Am. St. Rep. 300, 44 N. E. 411, with reference to a sale of heavy machinery in a room. In Pope v. Cheney, 68 Iowa, 563, 27 N. W. 754, it was held sufficient that the purchaser of corn in a crib, immediately after the purchase, nailed up the openings in the crib. The same ruling is made in Vining v. Gilbreth, 39 Me. 496; Morrison v. Oium, 3 N. D. 76, 54 N. W. 288. (See, also, Oit v. Sutcliffe (N. J. Ch.), 60 Atl. 965; Rapple v. Hughes, 10 Idaho, 338, 77 Pac. 722.)

3. It is further contended by the defendants that at least a portion of the property seized was liable to the satisfaction of Parr’s claim against the Shaekleton & Whiteway Construction Company, for the reason that the delivery, if any, was not made contemporaneously with the sale by the construction company to Farnham, Wright & Hale. The evidence discloses that a portion of the property in 'controversy was sold by the construction company to Farnham and others, on May 29, 1805, and that the purchasers did not take possession of it until June 26 following, when the remaining portion was sold. Bearing in mind, then, that the attachment was not levied until July 8, these facts present in concrete form the question raised by instruction 6a, .given by the trial court. The question may be stated as fol[162]*162lows: If a bona fide sale of goods and chattels is not accompanied by an immediate delivery, is the sale void as to an attaching creditor of the vendor, if the vendee, before the institution of the attachment suit, takes and retains actual possession of the property? So far as our investigation discloses, California and Colorado are the only states in which this question is answered in the afSrmative. (Watson v. Rodgers, 53 Cal. 401; Edwards v. Bank, 59 Cal. 148; Autrey v. Bowen, 7 Colo. App. 408, 43 Pac. 908.) There is not any- reason advanced in any of these cases for the conclusion reached. Counsel for defendants also cite Stewart v. Hoffman, 31 Mont. 184, 77 Pac. 689, as indicating the same view; but an examination of the opinion of this court on rehearing (31 Mont. 190, 81 Pac. 3) will disclose that the question was not before the court at all.

Prior to 1888 the court of appeals of Missouri held as do the courts of California and Colorado. (Cabanne v. Bay, 10 Mo. App. 594; Franklin v. Gumersell, 11 Mo. App. 306.) But in McIntosh v. Smiley, 32 Mo. App. 125, the precise question which we now have before us came before the same court. Section 2505, Revised Statutes of Missouri, is substantially the same as our section 6128 above. Our statute requires an immediate delivery; the Missouri statute requires a delivery within á reasonable time. In other respects the statutes are the same. In the McIntosh Case, however, the court found or assumed that the delivery was not made within a reasonable time after the sale, but was made before the attachment was levied; so that the question presented there was the same as the one which we are called upon to decide. The Missouri court makes a careful analysis of the statute, and points out the object to be obtained, as well as some of the objects to be avoided, by its enactment.

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Bluebook (online)
105 P. 732, 40 Mont. 156, 1909 Mont. LEXIS 158, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-mining-supply-co-v-quinn-mont-1909.