Woods v. Nixon

1 Add. 131
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Westmoreland County
DecidedSeptember 15, 1793
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1 Add. 131 (Woods v. Nixon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Westmoreland County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Woods v. Nixon, 1 Add. 131 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1793).

Opinion

President.

I will make three questions—1. Whether David Tate could have maintained any action for this horse ?

2. Could he have maintained replevin for him ?

3. Can Henry Woods maintain this action ?

1. The objection, on the first question is “that there was no delivery of this horse, and till delivery, the property is not changed."

Right and enjoyment are two different things; and the one may see perfect without the other. The property, or right, abstracted from the possession, arises from the contract; and is vested in the buyer, by the assent of the seller, who, from the time of the sale, is indebted to the buyer for a thing in kind. These principles apply to both parties. For as, if a horse be fold, and die in the table of the vendor, between the sale and the delivery, the vendor may have debt for the price, the horse being the horse of the buyer from the sale; so, for the same reason, if the horse live, and the seller refuse to deliver him, the buyer, tendering the price, may take the horse, or have detinue for him. In the case before us the price was paid. I should be disposed to consider delivery only as the conclusive evidence of the completion of a previous contract, which, without the symbol of delivery, had vested the right in the buyer. But there are other circumstances, which render this case stronger. The contract was entire, for a parcel or certain number of horses, and it cannot be severed at the will of one of the parties. He cannot deliver the worst horses, and retain the best. Delivery of part, without any new reservation expressed, and acceptance of the whole price, as completely executed the contract, as the circumstances could admit; and the horse coming into, or remaining in, the possession of Nixon, came into, and remained in, his possession, as the horse of Tate. Nixon was a mere trustee, bailee, or finder, like any other bona fide possessor and his being liable to refund the money can make no difference in the property of the horse: for that arises from his obligation to deliver the horse safely, and his retaining him contrary to his duty.

3 Reeve Eng Law 374. 2 Powel Contr. 64. See also 2 Med 243. 2 Comm 447-8. 2 Str. 955. 2 Com, Di. 632. Bull Ni. Pri. 49, 50. Bateman v. Ellman Cro. El. 866. James, versus Price, Losst. 219. Bach, versus Owen. 5 T. Rep. 499.

A husband, seized of land in right of his wife, sold 400 trees for 20l.; and half were taken away, and half of the price paid. The wife died, the heir entered, the husband brought debt for the other half of the money, and it was held good ; the contract being good, at the time, and entire, could not be fevered, having taken part, he might have taken the whole, in the lifetime of the wife. I argue, as before, the principles apply to both parties ; the remedy is mutual, If feiler can bring debt for the price, buyer may bring detinue for the thing sold. Detinue lies for him who has property, even though he never had possession, or his property be special, as, by heir, for an heir loom, by husband, for goods of wife, by buyer, for goods sold, or by bailee, or against bailee by him for whose use goods had been delivered. It lies, after performance of the condition, to recover hack goods sold and delivered on a certain condition. It was agreed between plaintiff and defendant, that plaintiff should exchange his ship F. for the defendant’s ship J. and give 25 guineas to boot, and, if the F. should be lost in the voyage she was then upon, 30 guineas more. Plaintiff paid defendant a guinea earnest. Afterwards defendant sent an excuse for not sending the R. because it had been previously sold to another.—Plaintiff required a peremptory answer, because, if the F. was lost, it would be to defendant’s hurt, and tendered the 24. guineas due of the boot, which the defendant refused. The F. was lost, on another voyage. Plaintiff brought trover for the R. and, though it was objected, as here, that the property was not transferred, it was held that trover lay, every part of the agreement having been performed by the plaintiff, and that detinue would have lien. In assumsit plaintiff declared, that it was agreed, on 1st May, 1792, that he should give defendant a colt, in exchange for defendant’s mare, and pay him two guineas to-boot, in 17th December following; that it was further agreed, that plaintiff should keep the colt till 29th September; that mutual promises were made ; that defendant, to make the bargain more firm, paid plaintiff one half-penny earnest ; and that plaintiff kept the colt till 29th September, was ready, and offered to fay defendant two guineas, but defendant would not [134]*134receive them, and had not delivered the mare to plaintiff, though often requested. To this declaration there was a demurrer, because it did not appear, that the plaintiff was ready and offered to deliver the colt to the defendant, in exchange for the mare. But it was held, that there was no foundation for this objection: the payment of the half-penny vested the property of the colt in the defendant, and therefore it was unnecessary for plaintiff to shew, that he had tendered the colt to the defendant.

Co. Lit. 145-6 Woods Inst. 192,570. Co Lit 145,b. Bull Ni.Pri. 53-2 Esp 48-9. Dall. 156.

On these principles, I hold, that David Tate might have maintained an action for this horse. He might have maintained detinue, trover, or assumsit.

2. Could he have maintained the action of replevin ?

In England, replevin lies chiefly, it is said only, for goods taken by way of distress. It seems therefore to suppose a previous actual possession in the plaintiff. Yet, in some cases, it lies, where the plaintiff has not had possession in himself, but in one under whom he claims. Husband may have replevin, for goods taken from his wife, before marriage; executor, for goods taken from his testator; lord, for goods taken from his villein, as a distress: the distreining did not alter the property, the goods remained in the custody of the law, and the right devolved to the plaintiffs. In a case in Modern Reports, it is stated, without any disapprobation, that replevin had been brought by one of the vendees against the other, for sheep sold by the owner to two different persons.—Be this as it may in England, the practice in Pennsylvania has been to issue replevins in all cases where a man claims property detained from him. By this practice, it becomes, in fact, an action of detinue or trover, with the specific remedy of chancery, unless the defendant claim property; and as it gives a chance of more perfect and summary justice, without danger of abuse, I am inclined to support it in the liberal extent of our practice; and, supporting it, must hold, that David Tate might have maintained an action of replevin against George Nixon, for this horse.

3. Can then Henry Woods maintain this action?

Let me premise, that George Nixon

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Add. 131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woods-v-nixon-pactcomplwestmo-1793.