Where, under a contract for the purchase of personal property something remains to be done to identify the property, or to put it in condition for delivery, or to determine the sum that shall be paid for it, the presumption is always *388very strong that by the understanding of the parties the title was not to pass until such act had been fully done and accomplished. But the presumption is by no means conclusive. If one bargains with another for the purchase of property, and that is done in respect to it which the parties agree shall pass the title, nothing more is generally requisite. The question is only one of mutual assent; whether the minds of the parties have met, and by their understanding the purchaser has now become owner. This is the general rule where the case is not within the statute of frauds. If one purchases gold bullion by weight and receives delivery before it has become convenient to weigh it, and on the understanding that the weighing shall be done afterwards, thefe can be no reasonable doubt, unless there are some qualifying circumstances in the case, that the bullion has now become his property and is at his risk. — Lingham v. Eggleston, 27 Mich., 324.
But we do not see how the judge could say, as matter of law, that delivery according to the understanding passed the title to the logs in this case. Delivery is usually the most significant fact in such a transaction, but it is not conclusive. One may receive delivery of something he has bargained for on the express understanding that the title shall not pass until the weighing or measuring which is to determine the price has been done. And if there may be an express understanding to that effect, so there may be an implied understanding of a like character. In this case delivery was to be made, not to the purchaser, but to the booming company, and the question at issue really is, for whom was the company bailee after the logs had been so delivered. The fact that the defendant was to pay the company’s charges raised a strong presumption that they were held for him, and that the company was his bailee. But,'on the other hand, the fact that the logs were to be subsequently scaled in order to determine how much should be paid, had a tendency to rebut this presumption. Moreover, no credit appears to have been agreed upon, and the *389legal inference is, where that is the case, that payment was to be made before the purchaser was to be at liberty to remove the property. This fact would also tend to show that while the booming company should hold the logs they would hold them for the seller.
The charge of the judge assumed that the title to the logs passed to the purchaser as soon as they had been delivered at the place in the river which the jury should find was the one agreed upon. Perhaps the jury may have reached this conclusion as an inference of fact from the evidence, but we cannot say that the opposite conclusion would have been unwarranted. However this may be, the question was one of fact, not of law.
The judgment must be reversed, with costs, and a new trial ordered. •
The other Justices concurred.