Wood M. & R. Co. v. Brooke

30 F. Cas. 513, 2 Sawy. 576, 9 Nat. Bank. Reg. 395, 1874 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 29
CourtDistrict Court, D. Oregon
DecidedMarch 17, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 30 F. Cas. 513 (Wood M. & R. Co. v. Brooke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wood M. & R. Co. v. Brooke, 30 F. Cas. 513, 2 Sawy. 576, 9 Nat. Bank. Reg. 395, 1874 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 29 (D. Or. 1874).

Opinion

DEADX, District Judge.

This is a petition asking that the plaintiff be adjudged the owner of thirteen reapers and five mowing attachments, now in the possession of the defendant as the property of the bankrupts, and for an order directing the defendant to deliver the same to the plaintiff.

Prom the petition, answer, stipulation and [514]*514evidence, it appears, that the plaintiff is a corporation engaged in the manufacture of agricultural implements at Hoosick Falls, N. Y., and that E. S. Whitcomb is and has been for some years past the agent of the company for the territory west of the Rocky Mountains, with a place of business at Ban Francisco; that Whitcomb agreed in writing with Comstock & Co., of Portland, Or., to sell, during the year 1872, within the limits of Oregon and Washington, the implements manufactured by the plaintiff, exclusively to said C. & Co., to be by the latter resold within said limits and paid for during the year, unless shaped without specific orders from C. & Co., in which case the machines were to be paid for when sold; that on September 0, 1872, said C. & Co., at the request of Whitcomb, sent plaintiff an order for one hundred and forty machines for the season of 1S73, whereby it was understood between the parties that the agreement of 1872 was substantially continued in force between them, with the right on the part of the plaintiff to terminate it at the end of any year; that the one hundred and forty machines above mentioned were shipped to C. & Co., at Portland, Or., before June 1, 1873, to be paid for, as appears from the bills of sale on September 1 of the same year, but in shipping the reapers, unmatched parts of six machines were sent by mistake for three perfect ones; that to correct this mistake, Whit-comb, on June 10, shipped to C. & Co. the parts of six other reapers to match those, with a letter of advice of June 5, explaining the transaction, and saying, “We do not expect you to pay for the machines this season, unless sold"—that is. the three extra ones not ordered; that on May 12, 1873, Whitcomb shipped to C. & Co. a lot of mowing attachments complete, in pursuance of their order of September 9, 1872, together with five other like machines, without any special direetion or understanding concerning the same; that on June 23. 1873, C. & Co. wrote Whit-comb to send them “ten more reapers, and if we sell them this season we will pay for them; if not, we will take them for the next season; if you think favorable, ship them by sail; not insure;" that on June 26, 1873, Whitcomb shipped ten machines to C. & Co., in pursuance of this order, and by letter of July 4 advised them of the fact, and added, “we would be glad to send you ten more (machines), as we shall probably have some to carry here this season, and should you wish more now we will ship them on terms proposed by you in your last letter"—that is of June 23d, aforesaid; that the bills sent to C. & Co., for all said implements were made out without qualification or reservation: “C. B. Comstock & Co., bought of Walter A. Wood Mowing and Reaping Machine Co.; terms September 1;” with this notice printed on the margin: “No goods sent on commission;” except the one of June 10th. for the parts of six reapers sent to match those before missent, which contained no date as to terms.

That on January 12, 1874, C. & Co. were adjudged bankrupts, and the defendant thereafter appointed assignee of their estate, to whom six of said reapers and four of said mowing attachments were delivered by the agents of said C. & Co. as the property of the latter; that the bankrupts returned these implements, and others not found, in their schedule as assets of the firm, but afterward, on February 12, amended the same, so as to state that all of said thirteen reapers and five mowing attachments, not included in the order of September 9, 1872, if not sold prior to September 1, 1873, “should be and remain the property” of the plaintiff; that all the implements received from plaintiff were kept together undistinguished from one another, and whether the implements in the possession of tne assignee are the ones mentioned in said amended schedule does not appear, except one reaper; and that said reapers cost one hundred and forty dollars apiece, and said mowing attachments sixty dollars apiece, in San Francisco, with fifteen and five dollars apiece, respectively, freight to Portland, which freight was paid by C. & Co.

Upon these facts the plaintiff claims that as to the thirteen reapers and five mowing attachments, C. & Co. were simply the agents of the plaintiff with authority to sell the same, and until a sale, that the property in the machines remained in the latter. In support of this proposition, counsel cites Mel-drum v. Snow, 9 Pick. 444, and Reed v. Upton, 10 Pick. 523.

I do not think that the cases are in point. In Meldrum v. Snow it was proven to be the usage for brewers to supply retailers with beer in the spring, to be kept on sale during the summer at the risk of the former, and paid for by the latter, as and when it was sold. As against the creditor of the retailer, the court held that the property in the beer did not pass to the latter on the delivery.

It is well settled, that where payment before delivery is waived by the seller, and immediate possession given to the purchaser, upon an express agreement that the title is to remain in the seller until payment on a future day, or contingency, that the payment is a condition precedent to the property in the thing sold, vesting in the purchaser, notwithstanding the sale and delivery. 1 Pars. Cont. 449. Bo in the case cited, the usage was equivalent, in the judgment of the court, to an agreement between the brewer and retailer, that the property in the beer should remain in the former until a resale by the latter. But in the absence of any such usage or agreement the sale and delivery of the beer, although upon a payment to be made at a future day or a contingency yet to happen, would have passed the property in the beer to the purchaser at once.

According to the evidence, these machines [515]*515were all sold and delivered absolutely to' C. & Co., without any agreement or reservation as to the title to the property. The only condition was the one in regard to the time of payment. That was a provision in favor of C. & Co., and amounted, in effect, to a stipulation that the machines were to be paid for when sold—whether in 1S73 or 1874.

Beyond this there was no understanding between the parties, and probably the agreement should be so construed as giving the plaintiff the right to have payment at the end of the season of 1874, whether the implements were then sold or not.

In Heed v. Upton, supra, it was held that an agreement to sell a brick-pressing machine, upon payment therefor, on or before a future day, and also that the buyer should have the use of the machine in the meantime, followed by delivery under the latter stipulation, did not pass the property in the machine to the purchaser prior to the payment therefor.

But there was an express provision that the sale should not take effect until payment, and also that the delivery in the meantime was only to the use of the purchaser.

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Bluebook (online)
30 F. Cas. 513, 2 Sawy. 576, 9 Nat. Bank. Reg. 395, 1874 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 29, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wood-m-r-co-v-brooke-ord-1874.