Ward v. Shaw

By the Court,

Savage, Ch. J.

The question is whether Crawbuck had an interest in the cattle which could be sold on execution. The sheriff and the plaintiff in the execution are possessed of the rights of Crawbuck, and no more. Had Crawbuck sold the cattle to a purchaser for valuable consideration, without notice of the terms on which he possessed them, other considerations might prevail; but in this case no new credit has been given to Crawbuck in consequence of his having the cattle in his possession. Platt’s debt accrued antecedent to the transaction in question, and of course was not contracted upon the credit of this property. If he fails, he is in no worse situation than he was before the sale of the oxen,

*406The question, then, is one between vendor and vendee, and as between them certain principles have been settled. 1. Where no credit is agreed to be given for the price of an article sold, the payment and delivery are concurrent acts. The vendor may refuse to deliver without payment; but if he does deliver freely and absolutely, and without any fraud on the part of the vendee, the condition of payment simultaneously with the delivery is waived ; confidence is reposed, credit is given, and the property passes. This was so decided in Chapman v. Lathrop, 6 Cowen, 110, and is supported by the cases there cited, 4 Mass. 405, 5 T. R. 232, and also by Harris v. Smith, 3 Serg. & Rawle, 20, 24, and by Chancellor Kent, 2 Kent’s Comm. 391. But where part only of the property has been delivered, without demanding compliance with the condition, the vendor may refuse to deliver the residue until performance of the condition. 1 Campb. 427. 2. If the vendor deliver the goods, accompanied with a declaration that he does not consider them sold until payment is made, according to a previous contract, the sale is conditional, and the property does not pass by the delivery as between the parties to the sale. 4 Mass. R. 405. 17 id.' 606. Two things are essential to the transfer of the title to personal property upon a cash sale : payment by the vendee, and actual or constructive delivery by the vendor. The first may be waived by the vendor, and the cases above cited shew that an absolute delivery is such waiver, but that a delivery subject to the condition of payment is not. 3. It is also a settled principle, that where any thing remains to be done by the vendor before the article is to be delivered, the right of property has not passed. So in the case of Hanson v. Meyer, 6 East, 615, where a quantity of starch was contracted to be sold at a certain price per hundred, the vendor gave the vendee an order, addressed to the keeper of the warehouse where the starch lay, directing him to weigh and deliver all his starch, it was held that the property did not pass before the weighing, which was to precede the delivery 'and to ascertain the price. The language of Lord Ellenborough in that case is applicable here: “ By fhe terms of the bargain, two things in the nature of conditions or preliminary acts, necessarily preceded the absolute vesting in them (the *407purchasers) the property contracted for. The first of them is one which does so according- to the generally received rule of law in contracts of sale, to wit, the payment of the price or consideration for the sale. The second, which is the act of weighing, does so in consequence of the particular terms of this contract, by which "the price is made to depend upon the weight. The weight therefore must be ascertained, in order that the price may be known and paid.” Vide Outwater v. Dodge, 7 Cowen, 36.

The sale being for cash, and by weight, the vendor is not bound to deliver until payment is made. Payment cannot be made until the price is ascertained by the act of weighing. Should, therefore, the vendee refuse to slaughter the oxen according to contract, and put them to work on a farm, the vendor may retake them. Should he refuse to pay, after weighing the quarters, the owner may take possession of his slaughtered cattle, for the property has not passed, under such a contract, until payment is made, or waived. The terms of the contract in this case forbid the idea of a waiver of payment when the cattle were delivered to be prepared for slaughter. The rule laid down in Hanson v. Meyer is, that the property does not pass when any thing remains to be done by the vendar; when the thing to be done is necessary to ascertain the price, and the sale is for cash, it can make no difference whether that thing is to be done by the vendor or vendee. The property is not to pass till payment; the price must precede the payment, and until the price is ascertained, payment cannot be made or waived, unless by express terms ; the acts of the vendor cannot before that time be construed into a waiver.

This case is unlike most of the English cases, where the property was in a warehouse of a third person. I put the case upon its own circumstances; the delivery was for a special purpose, not an absolute delivery to the vendee as such, but rather as bailee. There was an act to be done to ascertain the price. In general, the act of weighing or measuring is to be done by the seller; but parties have a right to stipulate that the purchaser shall do such act. It is sufficient that the vendor has an interest in the act to be done, and has a right to be present; when the weight is ascertained, then, and *408not before, can the vendor demand payment. If payment is t¡len macje) or waived, the property passes absolutely, otherwise not. If I am correct in this view of the case, Crawhuck had no interest in the cattle which could be sold on Platt’s execution. I am of opinion, therefore, that the court below erred, and that the judgment must be reversed; a venire de nox>o to issue by that court, and the costs to abide the event.