Morey v. Medbury

Bocees, J.

(dissenting) :

There was no delivery of the hops at the time of the contract of sale. The contrary of this is not pretended, as it could not be maintained on the evidence submitted. The question then is, whether the delivery afterwards, at the railroad station, was such a delivery as vested the title to the property in the defendants. Very manifestly it was not. The plaintiff left the hops with the station agent as his own property, under written directions to deliver them on payment of the pui’chase-price. The direction to the station agent was to deliver “m/y bale of hops upon the receipt of the money atfortyfoe cents per pound” A delivery of the property to the defendants by the station agent without payment would have been a wrongful delivery of the plaintiff’s property ; until payment the title remained in the latter. It is perfectly manifest that the plaintiff did not intend to part with his title until payment was made of the purchase-price. He expressly required payment as a condition of delivery. Hntil compliance with this condition the title remained in the vendor. These conclusions are fully sustained by the decision in Conway v. Bush (4 Barb., 564). See also Fleeman v. McKean(25 Barb., 474), and Smith v. Lynes (5 N. Y., 41). There are many other cases to the same effect. (See Knight v. Mann, 118 Mass., 146; 120 id., 220, and eases cited ; and Safford v. McDonough, id., 290.)

The title to the hops, therefore, remained in the plaintiff at the time they were stolen from the railroad station, and it follows that *545the loss occasioned, by the larceny must fall on the party then having the legal title. (Kein v. Tupper, 52 N. Y., 550.) We are cited to several cases holding that, under a contract of sale of goods, where nothing remains to be done by the seller before making delivery, the right of property passes, although the price be not paid nor the thing delivered. (Olyphant v. Baker, 5 Denio, 379; Hyde v. Lathrop, 3 Keyes, 597; Hayden v. Demets, 53 N. Y., 426, 431.) But these decisions have no application to a case like this in hand, where payment was to accompany delivery. The judgment should be reversed and new trial granted, costs to abide the event, and reference discharged.

Judgment affirmed, with costs.