By the Court.
Daly, F. J.The plaintiff, the master of a British vessel, after his arrival in this port, sent his chronometer to the defendants to have it repaired and regulated. He had bought it more than two years previously at the shop of a large watch and chronometer dealer in Liverpool, for twenty pounds, which, it would seem, was a fair price, as it was *51agreed upon the trial that the value of it here, at that time, November, 1868, was $150.
The defendants refused to return it, upon the ground that it was their property. It appeared that the chronometer originally belonged to them, and that they had, four yea^ before, let it out upon hire to the owners of a vessel bound for Liverpool, whereof one Myers was master; the owners giving the defendants a written acknowledgment of the receipt of it, by which they agreed that it should be returned to the defendants at the expiration of the voyage, or within twelve months from the date of the agreement, and that until returned they would pay the defendants at the rate of six dollars per month for the use of it.
How the chronometer came into the possession of the watch and chronometer dealer in Liverpool, does not appear. Those to whom it had been let upon hire had a special property in it, but had no right to transfer the title to another. A radical defect of title in the possessor, says Chancellor Kent, ^available to the true owner .as against the purchaser, and this is, he remarks, such a defect when the person from whom the property was acquired was incapable of giving his consent, or when the thing had been stolen or obtained by violence (2 Com. 325). If this were an open question, I should hold, the more especially- as the defendants have a written agreement upon which the owners of the vessel are answerable for the return of the chronometer or its value, that the plaintiff’s title to it ought to be upheld, upon the ground stated by Chief Justice Holt, in Hern v. Nichols (1 Salk. 289), that it is more reasonable that he who puts trust or confidence in the one that did the wrong, should be a loser, than a stranger. • But the law is too well settled to be disturbed by this court. It was declared in Hartop v. Hoare (3 Atk. 44), upon the authority of previous cases, and after an elaborate examination, that the true owner of goods does not lose his property by a sale made by the possessor of them, unless it were made in market overt; that no regard is had to the vendee’s ignorance of the vendor’s want of title; no regard to the vendee’s coming rightfully to them as a purchaser without notice; no regard to *52the vendor’s having the lawful possession of them. The custom of markets overt does not apply to this country, and the general principle, says Kent, applicable to the law of personal property, is, that nemo plus finis in alium transferre potest quam ipsq hdbeat, a maxim alike of the civil and the common law; that a sale ex vi termini, imparts nothing more than that the bona fide purchaser succeeds to the rights of the vendor, and that, consequently, as a general rule, the title of the true owner cannot be lost without his own free act and consent. In Saltus v. Everett (20 Wend. 282), Senator Verplanok, after reviewing all the authorities, limits the cases in which the possession of property carries with it the evidence of ownership and the right to transfer it, to cases of bank bills, checks and notes, payable to bearer or transferable by delivery, or where the indicia of ownership is given by the delivery of bills of lading with the power of transfer or the apparent right of property is conferred by a sale and delivery of it, though fraudulently obtained, or the right to sell implied as when goods are placed by the owner in the possession of one whose'usual busi$ ness it is to sell, and then lays down the general rule in terms,, specifically .embracing the present case. “ If the owner loses property or is robbed of it, or it is sold or pledged without his consent by one who has only a temporary right to its use by hiring or otherwise, or a qualified possession of it for a specific purpose, as for transportation or for work to be performed upon it, the owner can follow and reclaim it in the hands of any person, however innocent.” I confess I have never been satisfied with this rule, or rather with the. extent to which it has been carried. My experience is, that it operates very unjustly in very many cases, and that it would be better if it were qualified more by the reason suggested by Chief Justice'Holt. But it has been adhered to by the highest court in this State, and the whole amount of authority is in support of it ( Wilkinson v. King, 2 Camp. 335; Hardman v. Wilcox, 9 Bing. 382, note; Wheelwright v. Depeyster, 1 Johns. R. 471; Galvin v. Bacon, 11 Me. 28; Williams v. Merle, 11 Wend. 80; Cook v. Adams, 1 Bosw. 497).
The plaintiff testified that one of the defendants told him *53that the defendants had sold the chronometer, but it is evident from the testimony of Bussing, and from the production of the written agreement or receipt, that the plaintiff was mistaken. The justice could not have put his decision upon this ground but upon the ground that the plaintiff’s title to the chronometer was complete by his purchase of it in good faith at the watch and chronometer maker’s shop in Liverpool. The judgment must, therefore, be reversed.
Judgment reversed.