It is not necessary to the decision of this case to determine whether the charge of the Court was or was not strictly accurate and correct. There are many decisions going that far and which state the principle as given by Judge Alexander: Hanson vs. Meyer, 6 East. R., 614; Wallace vs. Breeds, 13 Ibid., 522; Simmons vs. Swift, 5 B. & C., 857; Barrett vs. Goddard, 3 Mason, 112; Allman vs. Davis, 2 Iredell, 12; and Mr. Selwyn affirms the rule to be as drawn from White-house vs. Frost., 12 East., 614, that if anything remains to be done on the part of the seller as between him and the buyer to ascertain the price, quantity or individuality of the goods before delivery, a right of property does not attach in the buyer.
The rule as stated has been quite strongly questioned by a a writer in 1 American Law Review, 413-431 and authorities quoted, and reasons given why, as it is claimed, the principle has been too broadly announced. I am not inclined to join issue with the positions assumed in the article referred to nor is it necessary that it should be done. It may be true, that there may be cases where the property passes without a delivery — without the weight being ascertained or without the aggregate price being ascertained, but it must appear to be the intention of the parties; the goods must be ascertained, there must be a valuable consideration and the contract must satisfy the statute, either by part or entire payment, or earnest, or by acceptance and delivery of part or the whole, or by a writing duly signed. But the question here turns on another point.
This case was founded on a contract alleged to have been made in 1862, before the Code went into operation, so that it is to be decided under a construction of the 17th section of the statute of frauds. It is not intended by this to intimate that the case would be different if it arose under the provisions of the Code, but to assert it to be just what it is, a case controlled by the statute of frauds. The 17th section of that statute re*146quires that a contract for the sale of goods for the price of £10 or upwards, in order to convey the title to the goods, must be accompanied with proof, either that part of the goods sold has been accepted and actually received, or that something has been given in earnest to bind the bargain, or in part payment, or that a note or memorandum, in writing, of the bargain must be signed by the parties to be charged by the contract or their agents: Benjamin on Sales, 68. The intent of tlie statute was to prevent the enforcement of contracts above a certain value, unless the defendant could be shown to have executed the alleged contract by partial performance, as manifested by part payment, or part acceptance, or unless his signature to some written note or memorandum of the bargain — not to the bargain itself — could be shown: Ibid., 147. Or, in other words, the rule may be said to be that, in order to make such a parol contract binding, so as to pass title, there must be something beyond the mere words of the contract. To hold that the statute could be satisfied by the parties to the contract verbally stipulating in the contract and as part of it, that the goods should be considei’ed as held by the seller as bailee for the purchaser, or that the price should remain with the buyer as the depositary of the seller, would destroy its whole virtue. It would allow a contract to be enforced which at last would only exist in words, the words that made it, without an act by either party towards its performance, or without a line of writing to prove it. The statute requires one or the other.
It has been often stated' as being now finally determined that the goods may remain in the possession of the seller, if he assume a changed character, and yet be actually received by the buyer; that it may be agreed that the seller shall cease to hold as owner, and shall assume the character of bailee or agent of the purchaser, thus converting the possession of the seller into that of the buyer through his agent. This is so laid down by Mr. Benjamin in his work already quoted from, page 130.
On examining the cases referred to, it will be found that *147there was something in nearly every one besides the mere verbal agreement of the parties that the seller should assume a changed character. There was an act done or performed by one or the other of the parties, or by both, which formed a marked feature in the transaction.
The first case referred to is Chaplain vs. Bogers, 1 East., 195, where it was held that a stack of hay remaining on the vendor’s premises was actually received by the purchaser; but this was on the ground that the buyer had re-sold a part of it to another person, who had taken away the part so purchased by him.
In Beaumont vs. Brengeri, 5 C. B., 201, the defendant had bought a carriage, which remained in the plaintiff’s shop by request of defendant. The plaintiff had a verdict, but it was in evidence, that defendant had ordered certain alterations made — had sent for the carriage and took a drive in it, after telling plaintiff he intended to take it out a few times so as to make it pass for a second hand carriage on exportation. The decision was put on the ground that the defendant had assumed to deal with it as his own, had accepted it, although it had been sent back and left in plaintiff’s shop.
So it will be found in most, if not all, of the cases which are referred to in support of the broad proposition, as stated above, that there was something more than a mere verbal agreement as to the character in which the seller was to hold the property. The case generally cited as the leading one on this point is Elmore vs. Stone, 1 Taunt., 458. There the purchaser of horses from a dealer left them with the dealer to be kept at livery for the buyer. Sir James Mansfield, delivering judgment, held that as soon as the dealer had consented to keep the horses at livery, his possession was changed, and from that time he held, not as owner, but as any other livery stable keeper. In this case, the fact was that the seller kept both a sale and a livery stable, and in compliance with the request of the buyer, transferred the- horses from the sale stable to the livery stable. It is true it is stated in the judgment that this fact did not affect the case; but strike it out, *148and it is difficult, if not impossible, to sustain the decision on principle or authority. And the case has been doubted in Howe vs. Palmer, 3 B. & A., 324, and Proctor vs. Jones, 2 C. & P., 534, and subsequent decisions have virtually overruled it.
The case of Walker vs. Nussey, 16 M. & W., 302, was this: An agreement for the purchase of goods, exceeding £10 in value, was made, with the understanding and as part of the contract, that the vendor should deduct from the price the amount of a debt due by him to the purchaser. The vendor then sent the goods to the purchaser, with an invoice, charging him with the price, £20 18s. lid, under which was written, “By your account against me, £4 14s. lid.” The purchaser returned the goods as inferior to sample. It was contended on behalf of the vendor, who brought an action for goods sold and delivered, that this credit of £4 14s. lid was a part payment of the price, sufficient to take the case out of the statute: Held, Not to be so. Platt, B., said, “ You rely on part of the contract itself as being part performance of it.” Pollock, C. B., said, “ Here was nothing but one contract; whereas, the statute requires a contract, and if it be nob in writing, something besides.” Parke, B., and Alderson, B., also added statements equally as clear and strong, all showing their unanimous opinion that no mere words in a contract, and which are part of it, will satisfy the statute. Indeed, if that could be done, the statute for all beneficial purposes might as well be stricken from the book.
I will refer to but one more case — that of Shinohr vs. Houston, 1 Comstock, 261. It seems to have been thoroughly considered, having gone up to the Court of Appeals of New York, from a decision of the Supreme Court, which last is reported in 1 Denio, 48. The judgment of the Supreme Court was reversed, Bronson, Judge, who had presided as one of the Judges in the Supreme Court and who concurred in the first decision, now concurring in overruling it. It was held, “that to constitute a delivery and acceptance of goods such as the statute requires, something more than mere words *149is necessary. Superadded to the language of the contract there must be some ad of the parties amounting to a transfer of the possession and an acceptance thereof by the buyer.” Gardner,- Judge, said, “The declarations relied upon as evidence of a delivery and acceptance, constitute a part of the contrad, and of course are obnoxious to all the evils and every objection against which it was the policy of the law to provide.” Bronson, Judge, said, “Mere words of contract, unaccompanied by any act, cannot amount to a delivery. To hold otherwise, would be repealing the statute.” Gardner, Judge, said, “So far as I have been able to look into the numerous cases that have arisen under the statute, the controlling principle to be deduced from them is, that when the memorandum is dispensed with the statute is not satisfied with anything but unequivocal acts of the parties; not mere words that are liable to be misunderstood and misconstrued, and dwell only in the imperfect memory of witnesses. The question has been, not whether the words used were sufficiently strong to express the intent of the parties, but whether the ads connected with them, both of seller and buyer, were equivocal or unequivocal.” Numerous other decisions are to the same effect, but the above with the extracts given are sufficient.
We find nothing in the record which shows any contract between these parties but a verbal agreement. There is not an ad of either party proven in connection with that contract, showing performance, or part performance — nothing showing payment or delivery and acceptance, except what is part of the verbal contract itself, and which was done by words. The purchaser, it is true, insured the cotton, but that was an act of his own, not by the direction or knowledge of the seller.
It is not necessary to notice, in this connection, the doctrine of constructive delivery, such as where the seller by some act relinquishes his dominion over the property and puts it in the power and control of the buyer. For instance, the delivery of the key of a store-room or warehouse, or other place where the goods are deposited, or directing a bailee who has the goods in possession to deliver them to the buyer, and which, *150by the assent of the bailee and the purchaser, are thence held as the property of the new owner. In such cases there is, in addition to the words of the bargain, an act of both parties, by which the dominion over the goods is transferred from the seller to the buyer. But here there was no delivery, actual or symbolical.
Upon the whole, whether the charge of the Court was or was not strictly accurate, there is no evidence in the record to take the case out of the statute, and the verdict was a legal necessity under the testimony.
Judgment affirmed.