The property for .the wrongful conversion of which plaintiff sought to recover damages consisted
“(1) That said Donnelly agrees to pay the purchase price of eight teams of horses or mules.
“(2) That the said teams are to be used in railroad grading work, for which said Flynn has--a contract with the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Bailroad Company in the state of Iowa.
“(3) That the said Donnelly shall receive, on or about the pay day of each month, from said Flynn, one-half of what said eight teams have earned during the month last past, at the rate of $3.50 per working day for each team, less the cost of keeping said team and the expense incurred in hiring men to drive, handle, and care for the same.
“(4) That said Flynn hereby agrees to pay to said Donnelly one-half of the purchase price of said teams onPage 434or before the time when said grading work shall be completed, with interest at the rate of seven per cent, per annum. It being expressly understood that, if the said one-half of said purchase money shall not have been paid when said work shall be completed, then said Donnelly shall receive as compensation for the work done by said teams $3.50 per day, less the expense of keeping them and hiring men to drive, handle, and care for the same.-
“(5) It is hereby further agreed that, in addition to the moneys paid to said Donnelly for the use of said teams as set out in paragraph 3, he shall receive from said Flynn, when said grading work shall have been completed, one-half of the amount of money, to be. computed as follows: Such amount shall bear the same ratio to the net profits of said grading work as the number of teams furnished by said Donnelly — i. e., eight teams — shall bear to the entire number of teams engaged in said work.”
For the purpose of showing the circumstances sur-, rounding the transaction, and the interpretation which the parties put upon it at the time, parol evidence was introduced, which, so far as competent, tended to prove that the animals were bought by plaintiff with his own money in carrying out the arrangement evidenced by the contract, and delivered to Flynn, there being no other contract or agreement with reference thereto; that they were brought • to Iowa, and used, as already stated; that they remained in the possession of Flynn until levied upon by the sheriff; and that nothing had ever been paid by Flynn to plaintiff for the animals under the terms of the contract above . set out or otherwise. It is to be noticed that there is nothing in the contract to indicate that the animals were sold by Donnelly to Flynn; neither is there any agreement of Flynn to pay Donnelly for them. But it is provided in the fourth division of the contract that Flynn shall pay to .Donnelly one-half of the purchase price within a certain time, with the further agreement that plaintiff shall
The stipulation as to division of profits is evidently imperfect, in that it does not provide how the profits shall be apportioned or disposed of in the event that Flynn does not pay one-half the purchase price as stipulated. But this defect in the contract does not help out the contention that Flynn was to become the owner of the property, with the agreement to fepay to plaintiff the money invested in the purchase of the animals. We cannot read the contract •otherwise than that plaintiff purchased and became the •owner of the animals, and delivered them to Flynn under an arrangement by which Flynn might become the owner of a one-half interest therein upon complying with certain conditions. These conditions not having been complied with, the animals remained the property of plaintiff.
' . i. Written* Iliaabiux- -■ conditional , sale' To constitute a conditional sale within the tenns of, the statute,, there must be a delivery of possession to the purchaser, .with-the intention of passing immediate ownership, subject only to the reservation of title o j seHer as security for the purchase money. Wright v. Barnard, 89 Iowa, 168; Gaar v. Scott & Co. v. Nichols, 115 Iowa, 22; Davis v. Giddings, 30 Neb. 209 (46 N. W. Rep. 425). -If the contract is conditional as to the transfer of ownership to the- vendee, so that on his failure to perform the condition no right as owner has passed to him, and no definite obligation to pay the-purchase price has accrued, then, instead of the transaction being a conditional sale, such as is contemplated by the statute, the delivery of possession constitutes a bailment only, with a right of purchase. In such a case the vendee has only an executory and conditional agreement for purchase, and until he exercises his right under such agreement he remains merely a bailee.Austin v. Dye, 46 N. Y. 501; Hamilton v. Billington, 163 Pa. 76 (29 Atl. Rep. 904); Dunlap v. Gleason, 16 Mich.158 (93 Am. Dec. 231).
The decisions in other states as to the distinction between a bailrpent with right to purchase and a conditional -sale are in point, even under our statute, for the statute relates only to sales transferring ownership with reservation of title to the vendor by way of security for the purcha«e price, and not to transactions which, under the law
®. notice of ownerseip: defects: waiver. It becomes important, therefore, to determine another controversy between the parties as to whether there was failure on plaintiff’s part to give notice to the sheriff of his ownership, such as to def ea.t his right of recovery against the sheriff. In Code, section 3991, it is provided that the officer is bound to levy execution on any personal property in the possession of defendant, unless he has received notice in writing, under oath, from some other person, his agent or attorney, that such property belongs to him, stating the nature of his interest therein, etc.; and that, while failure to give such notice shall not deprive the party of any other remedy, “the officer shall ho protected from all liability by reason of such levy until ho
It appears that, after the levy was made,- Flynn, without any authority from plaintiff, but purporting to act as his agent, gave written notice to the sheriff, signed and sworn to by himself, that plaintiff was the owner of the animals, and stating that plaintiff’s interest in the property was that acquired by plaintiff from Flynn by virtue of a bill of sale executed by Flynn to plaintiff. This notice was insufficient in two respects: It was not signed and sworn to by plaintiff, nor by anyone authorized by him to act as his agent or attorney; and it wholly misdescribed the interest of plaintiff, for there is no pretense that any bill of sale was ever given by Flynn to plaintiff, the interest of plaintiff, as we have already determined, being that of owner by virtue of the original purchase of the animals. After this notice was served on the sheriff, a good and sufficient indemnifying bond was, however, in fact executed by the attaching creditor of Flynn, and it is now contended for plaintiff that, although the notice was insufficient, any defect therein was waived by the execution of the bond; in other words, that the notice, though defective, served its purpose of inducing the execution of the bond, and that its sufficiency cannot now be questioned. It must be conceded that, had no bond been given, the sheriff would not have been liable to plaintiff for the sale of the property, although in fact it did belong to plaintiff, and not to Flynn. One object of the statutory provision certainly is to protect the officer against liability for the sale of the property levied on as that of the execution debtor, where another owning, the property fails to give sufficient notice of his ownership. Kaster v. Pease,
It is urged that the sale by the sheriff was an emergency sale on account of the supposed perishable nature of the property, and that the plaintiff would not have had time within which to give a further sufficient notice; but we need not consider what plaintiff’s rights would have been had there been an emergency sale before he had had reasonable opportunity to give proper notice of ownership. We are compelled to construe the statutes as we find them. It is well settled that, .so far as the attaching or execution creditors or the sureties on the bond are concerned, insufficiency of the notice is no defense to an action on the bond. Whitney v. Gammon, 103 Iowa, 366; Waterhouse v. Black, 87 Iowa, 821.
3 pleadingnotic^of' ownership. Wes e no reason why the same principle is not applicable In an action against the sheriff, who is protected by such bond. If the bond is valid notwithstanding the insufficiency of the notice, then the sheriff has recourse on the bond, which, it is conceded in this case, is adequate, and in compliance with the requirements of the statute. tt is argue(t that the plaintiff does not plead the execution of the bond as waiver of notice, ^t petition expressly alleges that the sheriff, in pursuance of the notice, required an indemnifying bond, and refused to proceed until such bond was furnished, whereupon the bond was given, and it seems to us that this is a sufficient pleading of waiver of notice. In Murray v. Thiessen, 114 Iowa, 657, we held
Our conclusion is that the plaintiff was 'the owner of the property, and is entitled to maintain an action against the sheriff for wrongful sale thereof, and the judgment of the lower court is reversed.