The action is to recover the market price of a quantity of wheat. The plaintiff, a farmer, delivered to the defendants, who are millers, 490 bushels of wheat, and they executed and delivered to him at the same time an instrument in writing which reads:
“ Canandaigua, November 14, 1878.
“ Received of Harris Andrews 490 bushels of wheat in store. The same is subject to him or option to take price on or before the first of May next.
“RICHMOND & SMITH.”
Before the first day of May following, the date of the instrument, the plaintiff informed the defendants that he would sell the wheat and take the market price as it ruled on that day, which was one dollar per bushel. The trial court directed the jury to render a verdict for the plaintiff for the sum of $417.29.
The evidence tended to prove that at the time the wheat was delivered it was placed in a bin containing two or three hundred bushels of wheat of the same kind and quality, of which they were the owners, and from which they were drawing every day for the purpose of grinding, and that when they received the wheat from the plaintiff they informed him that they intended to mix it with their own and manufacture it into flour. It was established on the trial that from the time of the delivery of the wheat up to the twenty-seventh day of January following, the defendants drew from this bin on an average 100 bushels per day for milling purposes, and placed therein about the same quantity. On the day last named the mill burned without any fault or negligence on the part of the defendants.
The question presented is this, was the transaction in law a bailment of the wheat, or was it a sale of the same, so that the title passed from the plaintiff to the defendants ? If the instrument in writing called a receipt expresses in full the contract under which the plaintiff' delivered his wheat to the defendants, then they were bailees of the wheat and the title remained in the bailor, and the defendants were under obligations and it was their duty to re-deliver on proper demand the specific wheat to the plaintiff, unless they were relieved from such obligation by an election on the part of the plaintiff to sell them the wheat at the market price, or the same was in some manner destroyed without the fault of the bailees. There is no expression in the instrument indicating an intention on the part of the plaintiff to part with his title and make a sale of the property in presentí. It was stored in the defendants’ mill subject to the plaintiff’s own order, with an option on his part at any time before the first of May, to sell to the defendants at the then market price, and on making such election the defendants were under the implied promise to pay for the wheat. Regarding the instrument as embracing the entire contract between the parties there is no reasonable grounds for disputing the views thus far expressed. (Goodyear v. Ogden, 4 Hill, 104; Dawson v. Kittle, Id., 107.) Therefore, confining the terms of the agreement to the receipt, the consumption of the wheat before the fire was a wrongful and tortious act and the defendants are liable to the plaintiff for the value of the wheat. By the verdict he recovered that much and no more.
We are now to consider the rights of the parties. Conceding the contract or arrangement to be as the oral evidence, together with the writing, tended to prove it to be, that is, the plaintiff consented
The distinction between a sale and a bailment is well defined by all authorities. The rule laid down is this: when the identical thing is to be redelivered, in the same or in an altered form, the contract is one of bailment and the title to the property is not changed. But when, by the contract, there is no obligation to restore the specific article, and the bailee is at liberty to return another of equal value, he becomes a debtor under obligation to make a return in kind and the title to the property changes, it is a sale. I quote the remarks of Story in commenting on this class of cases: “ The property passes to the borrower, it being a loan for consumption, and he being bound to restore not the same thing, but other things of the same kind. Thus if corn or wine or any other thing which is not intended to be returned back, but an equivalent in kind, is lost or destroyed by accident, it is the loss of the horrower, for it is his property and he must restore the equivalent in kind.” (Story on Bailments, § 283; Mallory v. Willis, 4 Comst., 76; Foster v. Pettibone, 3 Seld., 433; Buffum v. Merry, 3 Mason, 478; Ewing v. French, 1 Blackford [Ind.], 353; Norton v. Woodruff, 2 Comst., 153; Barker v. Roberts, 8 Greenleaf, 101; Chase v. Washburn, 1 Ohio, 244; Story on Bailments, § 439.)
So which ever view the jury may have taken of the case, the defendants’ liability to account for the value of the wheat at the time of the fire was established. The mere consent of the plaintiff that his wheat might.be mixed with the wheat of the defendants of the same kind and quality was not inconsistent with a bailment simffliciter. Owners of the same kind of property and of equal value, like cereal grains or wines, may consent that they be mixed together in mass,
On these admitted legal propositions, together with conceded facts that the loss was without the defendants’ wrong or negligence, the learned counsel for the appellants bases his argument that the relation of bailor and bailee existed between the parties at the time of the loss of the wheat in the bin by fire, and the loss should be borne by the respondent. But this argument ignores other facts appearing in the case, to wit, that it was the purpose and intention of the bailees to consume the wheat by converting it into flour and selling the same as their own property, to which arrangement the bailor assented.
An agreement that the particular article which the owner places in the hands of another, may be by him consumed or sold in the course of trade, is utterly inconsistent with the principles on which the law of bailment is founded. The very term bailment implies that the owner of an article has placed it in the hands of another who is at some time to redeliver the same to the owner. If the owner consents that the person to whom he delivers the thing may consume or destroy it, it is not a bailment, whatever else the transaction may be in the law. In the case at bar there is no fair question but that all the wheat delivered was ground into flour before the Are.
Ve are cited to cases which are supposed to support the appellants’ argument, that although the identical wheat was consumed by them, the case was one of bailment, as there was all the time other wheat in the bin equal to the amount delivered and of the same class and quality.
In the case of Ledyard v. Hibbard (48 Mich., 421), the defendants were millers, and received from the plaintiff, a farmer, wheat from his wagon and delivered to him a receipt stating that the wheat was received “at owner’s risk from elements, at ten cents less Detroit quotations for same grade when sold us.” This wheat, with the knowledge of the owner, was stored in a bin with the
After an examination of the opinion of that learned court we fail to find an affirmance of any rule of law hostile to the views we have expressed. The court say, that “ by the receipt the grain was declared to be at the bailor’s risk for the time being; it must have continued at his risk until some act was afterwards done by one party or the other to convert what at first was a bailment into a sale.” The court also remarked: “ It is true if the wheat is all consumed, and the amount in store is not kept good so that a demand for the wheat can be responded to, and if consumption is by the consent of the owner, express or impUed, the consumption under such circumstances may be justly regarded as the meeting of the minds of the parties at the time of sale; but so long as the grain is kept in store from which the receipts may be met, the fair presumption is that it is intended that it shall be met, and this presumption would only be overcome by some act unequivocal in its nature.”
It also appeared in the case that the defendants were warehouse-men, having an elevator and were receiving grain in store from other parties on similar terms and conditions, and there was no •finding that it was the intention of both parties that the grain delivered by the plaintiffs should be ground into flour and sold by the millers as their own. The case falls within the class of cases which are now so common in commercial centers; that the owner of grain may deliver the same to a warehouseman for store with the understanding that the same will be mingled with other grain, and he receive in return grain of the same class and quality, and as
In the case at bar the defendants were not warehousemen, and it is not disclosed that they had similar transactions with other parties.
The evidence, which tends to show that the arrangement was in fact different from the one expressed in the receipt, must be regarded as proved by the defendants, for the plaintiff could well stand by the case made in his favor by the terms of the receipt, and the most favorable view that can be taken of the ease from the evidence, in connection with the receipt, is that the plaintiff consented that the defendants might use the wheat, as they did, and replace the same with other wheat of the same kind and quality. Such an arrangement was a sale of the wheat, as we have attempted to demonstrate.
Judgment and order both affirmed, with costs.
Judgment and order affirmed.