Carrow v. Weston

102 S.E.2d 134 (1958) 247 N.C. 735

L. T. CARROW
v.
Elizabeth C. WESTON, Administratrix of the Estate of F. E. Weston, Deceased.

No. 21.

Supreme Court of North Carolina.

February 26, 1958.

*136 Peel & Peel, Williamston, for defendant-appellant.

R. L. Coburn, Williamston, for plaintiff-appellee.

BOBBITT, Justice.

In his complaint, also in the "itemized and verified claim" theretofore filed with the administratrix, plaintiff asserted a right to recover the total of the two worthless checks, to wit, $471.97, being the amount Weston agreed to pay as purchase price for the logs; and plaintiff's action is to establish that his claim for $471.97 is a preferred claim against the estate.

The court's legal conclusions were: (1) that "no title passed to * * * Weston by reason of the delivery of the logs to him * * *"; (2) that "the value of said logs in the possession of * * * Weston or his administratrix * * * constitutes a trust fund" for the benefit of plaintiff and "is now so held by said Administratrix"; and (3) that "said fund is not a part of the estate of * * * Weston, in that it is not subject to the payment of debts and costs of administration." (Our italics.)

The court held, in effect, that plaintiff had no claim against the estate; but that the administratrix had in her possession a fund of $471.97 that belonged to plaintiff, not to the estate.

In this jurisdiction, "* * * where the seller contracts to sell a chattel to the buyer for cash, and the seller accepts a check from the buyer as a means of payment of the cash and delivers the chattel to the buyer in the belief that the check is good and will be paid on presentation, no title whatever passes from the seller to the buyer until the check is paid; and the seller may reclaim the chattel from the buyer in case the check is not paid on due presentation." Wilson v. Commercial Finance Co., 239 N.C. 349, 79 S.E.2d 908, 913, and cases cited. (Our italics.) The rule, as stated, is applicable where the seller elects to reclaim the chattel, Weddington v. Boshamer, 237 N.C. 556, 75 S.E.2d 530, or to recover a specific fund in the hands of the buyer's administrator identified as derived solely from unauthorized sale of the chattel. Parker v. First-Citizens Bank & Trust Co., 229 N.C. 527, 50 S.E.2d 304. In reaching its said first conclusion of law, perhaps the court had this rule in mind.

But a seller, who accepts a check as a cash payment, need not elect to treat the sale as void if the check is dishonored. "A person sui juris may waive practically any right he has unless forbidden by law or public policy." Seawell, J., in Clement v. Clement, 230 N.C. 636, 55 S.E.2d 459, 461. The contractual obligation of the buyer to pay cash is a provision solely for the benefit of the seller. If he elects to do so, the seller may waive this provision and ratify the sale. Wilson v. Commercial Finance Co., supra. Moreover, he may do so after he has knowledge that the check, originally accepted as conditional payment, has been dishonored. If he so elects, the remedy then availabe to the seller is to recover on the contract, i. e., the debt due him as agreed purchase price for the chattel. If the rule were otherwise, a dissatisfied buyer could avoid his obligation to pay the agreed purchase price simply by giving a worthless check therefor or by stopping payment on his check, leaving the seller no remedy except to reclaim a chattel he did not want.

"The doctrine of election is founded on the principle that where, by *137 law or by contract, there is a choice of two remedies which proceed upon opposite and irreconcilable claims of right, the one taken must exclude and bar the prosecution of the other. A party cannot, either in the course of litigation or in dealing in pais, occupy inconsistent positions." Adams, J., in Irvin v. Harris, 182 N.C. 647, 653, 109 S.E. 867, 870. Where a sale is voidable, because induced by fraud, the applicable rule is well stated by Dillard, J., in Wilson v. White, 80 N.C. 280, as follows: "If a vendor of goods is drawn in to part with his property by fraudulent misrepresentation or concealment of a fact material to the contract and operating as an inducement thereto, and such as a man of ordinary sagacity might reasonably rely on and be influenced by, the sale is voidable, and the vendor has the option to affirm the sale and sue for the price, or hold it null and sue for the goods in specie, as against the purchaser or a stranger holding without valuable consideration or with notice of the fraud. Benj. Sales, 342; Story Sales, sec. 165; Bigelow Fraud, sec. 2." See, also, Joyner v. Early, 139 N.C. 49, 51 S.E. 778, and cases cited. The rule as stated applies equally when, as here, the seller may treat the sale void or may waive the provision for cash payment and ratify the sale.

Here plaintiff was required to elect as between two available but inconsistent remedies. As succinctly stated in 78 C.J. S. Sales § 597: "If the seller sues to recover the debt, he looks to the debtor and not to the property; and if he retakes the property, he looks to the property and not to the debtor."

It follows that, if plaintiff ratified the contracts of sale, his remedy is to recover on contract the agreed purchase price. In such event, he is a general creditor for $471.97; and his claim is payable out of the assets of the estate.

On the other hand, if the plaintiff elected to treat the sale as void, nothing else appearing, he is entitled to assert a claim against the estate for the fair market value of the logs when wrongfully converted by Weston to his own use. It is stipulated that such fair market value was $471.97. A tort claim so asserted would be a general claim, payable out of the assets of the estate. Under the agreed facts, the result would be a general claim for the identical amount, whether asserted as a contract claim or as a tort claim.

We pass without decision, the question as to whether plaintiff, by filing his claim as aforesaid and by alleging his cause of action as aforesaid, has elected to ratify the sales and by doing so is estopped to proceed otherwise than as a general creditor; for the agreed facts do not support the judgment on the theory on which it was rendered.

If we assume that plaintiff has elected or may elect to treat the sales as void, before he can establish that he, not the estate, is the owner of funds now in the hands of the administratrix, he must trace and identify such funds as derived from the logs or from lumber manufactured therefrom. The court was in error in its second conclusion of law, namely, "that the value of said logs * * * constitutes a trust fund." (Our italics.) Plaintiff must establish that the administratrix actually has in her hands funds derived from the disposition of the logs and the amount of such funds. On this theory of the case, it is necessary to keep in mind that we are concerned with plaintiff's ownership of specific funds now in the hands of the administratrix, not with a claim by plaintiff against the estate.

Did the logs remain in that status or were they used in the manufacture of lumber? Were they sold, or otherwise disposed of, by Weston in his lifetime? If sold, for what amount? What became of the money, if any was collected? Did these logs, or lumber manufactured therefrom, or any part thereof, or any logs or lumber, ever come into the possession of the administratrix? What funds does the administratrix have in hand? What part *138 thereof, if any, was obtained from her sale of these logs or lumber manufactured therefrom, or from the sale of any logs or lumber? The agreed facts afford no answers. Nothing is established as to what became of these logs or any logs or lumber manufactured therefrom or as to the source from which such funds as the administratrix may have were derived. In this connection, it is noted that, even if it were shown that these logs, as such, actually came into the possession of the administratrix, and that she sold them, plaintiff's recovery on this theory of the case would be the actual amount she received from such sale (not the price Weston had agreed to pay therefor), that is, if plaintiff elected to ratify her sale rather than seek to recover the actual logs from the person then in unlawful possession thereof. Parker v. First-Citizens Bank & Trust Co., supra.

If no title passed to Weston, no title passed from Weston to the administratrix. She "stands in the shoes" of her intestate. McBrayer v. Harrill, 152 N.C. 712, 68 S.E. 204; Parker v. First-Citizens Bank & Trust Co., supra; Coastal Sales Co. v. Weston, 245 N.C. 621, 97 S.E.2d 267. If we were to assume that the logs came into her possession as the result of Weston's wrongful conversion thereof, the question would arise as to whether technically either Weston or the administratrix would be deemed a constructive trustee. Ordinarily, a constructive trustee has legal title as well as possession. See Restatement, Restitution sec. 160(j); Scott on Trusts, sec. 508.1, p. 3255. Be that as it may, to establish ownership of any funds now in the hands of the administratrix, plaintiff must identify such funds as traceable to and derived from the logs with the same degree of certainty as is required to trace and identify trust property or funds. See Edgecombe Bank & Trust Co. v. Barrett, 238 N.C. 579, 78 S.E.2d 730, and cases cited.

The agreed facts establish that plaintiff has a general claim against the estate for $471.97, nothing more, which defendant admits. Hence, there is error in the judgment. Accordingly, the cause is remanded for modification of the judgment so as to strike therefrom the provisions that purport to give plaintiff's claim for $471.97 a status other than that of a general claim against the estate. It is so ordered.

Error and remanded.