The action is detinue, to recover divers articles of merchandise' such as mav usually be found for sale in a grocery store. The plaintiff prevailed in the court below as to all the goods sued for, and the defendant appeals. The claim of the plaintiff was rested on the contention that .such fraud ivas committed by one Beeves, the original vendee, in the purchase of the goods, that as vendor it had the right to rescind the sale and reclaim the goods. The defendant resisted a recovery upon the claim that the proof did not satisfactorilv establish fraud in the purchase, or, if it did, that he was a purchaser for value without notice either of the fraud or of facts sufficient to put him on inquiry, which if prosecuted, would have given him such notice. The rules *220of law which apply in a case of this kind — a controversy between a vendor seeking to reclaim goods and an alleged subvendee, claiming to be an innocent purchaser for value without notice — have been announced by this court in a series of cases which seem to plainly settle the law on the subject and to indicate the scope and nature of' the inquiry. These cases also furnish a sufficient guide as to the burden of proof, and its shifting from one side to the other, as the jury, in consideration of evidence tending to support the one party or the other passes from issue to issue in reaching a conclusion upon the facts. As the principles settled by our previous decisions were not observed upon the trial, we will announce the rules which, under the tendencies of the'evidence in this case, should be held steadily in mind by the court when admitting evidence or delivering instructions to the jury.
To authorize the rescission of a sale of chattels on the ground of fraud on the part of the vendee, so that a recovery may be had in detinue or trover against the first purchaser or subpurchaser, these conditions or facts must be combined: (1) The purchaser must at the time of the transaction have, been insolvent or in failing circumstances. (2) The first purchaser must have had either a preconceived design not to pay for the goods or no reasonable expectation of being able to pay for them. (3) The. purchaser must have intentionally concealed these facts or made a fraudulent representation in regard to them, (á) The sale must have been induced by the fraudulent representation or concealment. And the burden of proof, in the first instance, rests upon the plaintiff to reasonably satisfy the'jury of the existence of each of the foregoing requirements. If a plaintiff fails to carry this burden in any of the four particulars, a recovery cannot be had, either against the original vendee or another claiming under him, whether a bona fide or a mala fide purchaser, or even a stranger. If the evidence reasonably satisfies the jury of the .existence of each of the essentials above stated, it is incumbent upon one claiming to be subvendee to show that he is in fact a purchaser from the original vendee and that he paid *221value for the goods; and whether he paid cash, in whole or in part, for the chattels, or took them in payment of a debt due to him from his debtor, he would be a purchaser for value within the meaning of this rule. If the jury should believe from the evidence, including all the facts and circumstances, that what appeared in form to be a sale and conveyance to the defendant was in secret trust for the original purchaser, then the same principles, and those only, would apply that arise in this class of cases against such original purchaser, since one holding goods under a pretended sale in secret trust for the original purchaser must stand in the shoes of such purchaser. If the defendant successfully carries the burden as above: indicated, then the onus shifts to the plaintiff to prove to the reasonable satisfaction of the jury that tire defendant, a subpurchaser, had notice of the fraud when he purchased, or before he paid the purchase money or parted with the consideration, or had knowledge of facts putting him on inquiry which, if diligently prosecuted, would have brought him to a knowledge of the plaintiff’s claim.
The principles of 'law Avhich- obtain in a contest betAveen a creditor, on the one hand, and a purchaser from his failing debtor, on the other, are not applicable in this case and similar cases. The motives of tire parties are not material. If the defendant be a purchaser for value without notice or knoAvledge of facts that Avould lead to notice, it is not important that the consideration Avas in part cash, or even that the price paid Avas greatly less than the value of the property, provided he parted with a consideration of some value as distinguished from a merely good consideration. There might be an absence of good faith, in that the purchase by the defendant Avas made to defraud the creditors of the original vendee; yet, if the latter committed no fraud in the first purchase, or if the defendant was a purchaser for value without notice, as above defined, the plaintiff could not recover. These rules are the result of all of our previous decisions, although they will not be found stated exactly in the foregoing form; and it may be these principles Avill not all be found to have been announced in any one case. *222We collect these cases from which the principles applicable have been derived. — Loeb v. Fash, 65 Ala. 526; Spira v. Hornthall, 77 Ala. 137; Hornthall v. Schonfeld, 79 Ala. 107; Kyle v. Ward, 81 Ala. 120, 1 South. 468; LeGrand v. National Rank, 81 Ala. 123, 1 South. 460, 60 Am. Rep. 140; Robinson v. Levi, 81 Ala. 134, 1 South. 554; Darby v. Kroell, 92 Ala. 607, 8 South. 384; Johnston v. Bent, 93 Ala. 160, 9 South. 581; Traywick v. Keeble, 93 Ala. 498, 8 South. 573; Wilk v. Key, 117 Ala. 285, 23 South. 6.
The earlier cases do not in terms require that the sale must have been induced by the fraudulent representation, or must have resulted from a want of knowledge on the part of the vendor of some material fact which the purchaser fraudulently concealed; but this omission is explained in Darby v. Kroell, 92 Ala. 607, 8 South. 384, where it was said: “This absence of reference to the familiar doctrine that fraud for which a contract may he rescinded must have conduced to its. execution is due to the fact that the exigencies of those cases did not require a consideration of that question ;tliere being no evidence in any of them which tended to show that the seller did not rely on the statements of the purchaser, and not to the idea that the general rule was not applicable to this class of cases. There is, and can be, indeed, no reason why it should not fully obtain' in a case like this and defeat rescission and recovery, when the jury find that, though false representations have been made and fraudulent concealments have been resorted to, the seller did not rely or act on such representation, and was not influenced by a, state of facts which the purchaser’s concealment induced him to believe existed.”
Before treating of such of the instruction to the jury as we propose to specially consider, it may be well to direct attention to the tendencies of the evidence. The goods sued for and recovered were not all sold at the same time. The plaintiff began to extend credit to Reeves, the original purchaser, about August 1, 1902, and the goods were sold to him from time to time during the period intervening between that date, and April, 1903, when the last purchase was made. The course of dealing *223was that plaintiff’s representative would visit Beeves about every two weeks, collect money on account, and sell him other goods, if he desired to buy. For some months before his failure Beeves had owed the plaintiff as a result of their method of dealing, and at one time owed more than the amount of the indebtedness which existed when he failed. At no time prior to the date of the last purchase, about April 1, 1903, did Beeves make, or was he asked to make, any statement as to his financial condition to the plaintiff. On several occasions plaintiff’s salesman tried to sell Beeves more goods than the latter wanted, and this was true on the occasion of the last purchase, at which time Beeves paid him more money on account than the amount of the then purchase. Beeves denied having made any statement as to his condition at any time; but plaintiff’s representative testified that about April 1, 1903, and prior to that sale, “Beev'es stated to him that April 18th would be pay day with some mill hands near there and that he could pay him some considerable sum on Ixis account, that he was getting aloxxg well, that his home was paid for, that he owned two houses and xvas making money, and that the mill hands owed him.” There seems to have been xxo effort by testimony to identify any of the goods sued for as having been a part of the last purchase, or to show when axxd in how many separate transactions the particular goods were bought, except by the geixeral statement that Beeves purchased the goods from August'1, 1902, to April 1, 1903. The failure of Beeves occurred about two or three weeks after his last purchase of goods, he being insolvent, and took the form, according to the defendant’s evidence, of a sale by Beeves to liim of his stock of goods, exclusive of book accoixxxfs, at the sxxm of $500, of which the suxxx of $150 was claimed to have been paid ixx currency, axxd for the balance of the purchase price a past-due note of Beeves for $350 was testified to have been surrendered. The evidence conflicted as to the value of the stock, and the plaintiff introduced evidence of a statement of defendant that his purchase included tlxo book accounts also. There was evidence that after the failure Beeves was collecting the accounts, and *224that, after being absent a few days, he returned to the store and was engaged there; the defendant claiming that he was employed as a clerk merely. The plaintiff’s evidence showed that Reeves started in business with a small stock, which gradually increased; that the stock was open to plaintiff’s salesman, and that he could plainly see what Reeves had, although he knew nothing about the book account; and Reeves testified that he did not conceal or make any effort to conceal his condition from Mays, the plaintiff’s agent, who dealt with him; tliat Mays visited his store every two weeks before the failure, for 2 1-2 years, and knew what he had; that his property consisted of a small homestead worth $300, his stock of goods and book accounts, and that Mays often desired to sell him more goods than he would buy.
We have already stated the rules of law applicable to a controversy of this character. Situated as this case is, it is obvious that account should be takem/of the circumstance that the court is not dealing with a single purchase, but with numerous separate purchases covering a period of nine months, and that to obtain a proper result application of the true principles must be made to each transaction. There might be fraud justifying rescission in cue and not in another, and if there were fraud in one purchase, at the time it was made, and. yet the purchase price was thereafter paid, most clearly there could be no rescission of that particular sale. Moreover, if there was fraudulent concealment or misrepresentation, and this was not relied on and did not induce the sale, there could be no recovery; and this principle might operate in one instance to defeat recovery of goods then sold, and not do so in another.
The charges asked on both, sides were framed without reference to the separateness of the several purchases, and were formulated as if the jury were dealing with the last purchase alone, at the time of which there was proof of representations as to the financial condition of Reeves. We will not undertake to criticise each charge given and refused, as what we have said will constitute a sufficient-guide for another trial. We are not- prepared to say the general charge should have been given for the defendant. *225on tlie whole case, and it was upon the whole case that it was asked. Whether, under the evidence, there was in reality a sale to Pelham, or whether the sale was in secret- trust for Reeves, was a question of fact for the jury, and will he an inquiry of importance if a case justifying a rescission as to any of the goods be made out in accordance with the principles of law herein announced. It was likewise a question for the jury whether Pelham was a purchapser for value and without notice.
That portion of the court’s general charge to which an exception was reserved was erroneous in declaring that upon tin hypothesis stated a right of rescission existed, without reference to the solvency or insolvency of Reeves. One of the essentials of a right to rescind is that the purchaser must have been insolvent or in failing circumstances.
Charges 1, 3, and 4 given for the plaintiff, pretermitted inquiry whether the alleged fraud of the vendee induced the vendor to sell him. and were improperly gven.
Charge 10, and others like it, postulating a finding by the jury that the purchase was fraudulent, might well have been refused, because not defining to the jury the elements constituting a fraudulent sale, but were not for that reason positively erroneous, since their misleading tendency might have been obviated, by an explanatory charge.
It was not. an error to disalbnv defendant to prove that plaintiff had sought to collect the debt from Reeves, or to compromise with him, before bringing this suit. A creditor may well request his debtor to pay for goods purchased, and, if payment be refused, may seek rescis.«ion, if the conditions justify it. A creditor does not waive his right of rescission by requesting payment from his debtor. The creditor took no legal action against Reeve,s, and did nothing inconsistent with the exercise of his right of rescission, if such right existed.
Reversed and remanded.
Tyson, Simpson, and Anderson, JJ., concur.