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Vermont Marble Co. v. Brow

Supreme Court of California
Sep 27, 1895
109 Cal. 236 (Cal. 1895)

Summary

In Vermont Marble Co. v. Brow, 109 Cal. 241, [50 Am. St. Rep. 37, 41 P. 1031], it is declared: "The common law right of seller by appropriate contract to retain the title until performance of some valid condition on the part of the buyer has been long recognized in this state as almost universally elsewhere."

Summary of this case from Greene v. Carmichael

Opinion

         Department Two

         Appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court of Yuba County and from an order denying a new trial. E. A. Davis, Judge.

         COUNSEL:

         The transaction was a sale on credit, with an attempted secret lien to the Marble company, yet with control of title by Plymire, and the nature of the contract and the purposes to be attained must be looked to rather than the name given it, in order to determine its real character. (Hervey v. Rhode Island Locomotive Works , 93 U.S. 664; Heryford v. Davis , 102 U.S. 235; Palmer v. Howard , 72 Cal. 293; 1 Am. St. Rep. 60; Bangs v. Friezen , 36 Minn. 423; Kabley v. Worcester Gas Co ., 102 Mass. 394; National Car etc. Builder v. Cyclone etc. Co ., 49 Minn. 125; 21 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, 520, 521, and notes; Granite Roofing Co. v. Casler , 82 Mich. 466; Braunn v. Keally , 146 Pa. St. 519; 28 Am. St. Rep. 811.)

         Forbes & Dinsmore, for Appellant.

          W. H. Carlin, for Respondent.


         By the terms of the contract the plaintiff was the owner of the property in dispute at the time of the levy and sale, and the vendor had the right to retain the title. (M'Cullough v. Porter, 4 Watts & S. 177; 39 Am. Dec. 68; Blood v. Palmer , 11 Me. 414; 26 Am. Dec. 547; Civ. Code, secs. 1727- 31; Wright v. Solomon , 19 Cal. 64; 79 Am. Dec. 196; Hegler v. Eddy , 53 Cal. 597; Kohler v. Hayes , 41 Cal. 455; Stokes v. Balaam , 73 Cal. 155; Lowe v. Woods , 100 Cal. 409; 38 Am. St. Rep. 301; March v. McKoy , 56 Cal. 85; Putnam v. Lamphier , 36 Cal. 151; Parke etc. Co. v. White River etc. Co ., 101 Cal. 37; Commercial Nat. Bank v. Heilbronner , 108 N.Y. 439; Heryford v. Davis , 102 U.S. 235; Palmer v. Howard , 72 Cal. 293; 1 Am. St. Rep. 60.)

         JUDGES: Britt, C. Searls, C., and Haynes, C., concurred. McFarland, J., Temple, J., Henshaw, J.

         OPINION

          BRITT, Judge

         Defendant was constable of Marysville township in Yuba county, and was sued in this action by plaintiff, a corporation, for the value of certain marble monuments sold by him July 10, 1893, under writs of execution issued from the justice's court of said township against the property of one Plymire upon judgments obtained there by creditors of Plymire. The chief question involved is whether the marble when levied upon and sold was the property of plaintiff or of said Plymire. The latter had a marble-shop at Marysville and was a dealer in funerary stones and monuments; he had been accustomed for several years to purchase from plaintiff unfinished monuments and other marble needed in his business, and on July 19, 1892, he was in plaintiff's debt some two thousand five hundred dollars for such materials purchased previously to that time, and plaintiff was apprehensive that further sales to him outright would involve loss; to prevent this Plymire agreed in writing with the marble company, on the date last mentioned, that in consideration [41 P. 1032] of its sending to him certain specified monuments "on consignment" he would hold the same as the property of the company until sold, and subject to its order; that as fast as he sold the monuments he would remit the money -- the cost price at which each was listed to him -- and when he took notes in lieu of cash he would remit the notes as collateral for his account. Subsequently, in May, 1893, Plymire agreed with plaintiff for a further consignment of goods, specifically described, written memoranda of which agreement provided in substance that he should keep an account of the sale of the monuments described in a book, and send such book to the marble company on the first of each month, and, "as fast as said work is sold and erected" pay to the company the list or cost price to him of each piece of marble sold by him, "either by cash or customer's note," the same to be placed to his credit as fast as cash should be received; that he held the marble merely on consignment to be paid for when sold, and that it remained the property of the marble company "until paid for, as above," and at all times subject to its order. Ten monuments, of the value of six hundred and eighty-three dollars, were converted by defendant, as the court found, and of these three had been delivered to Plymire under his arrangement with plaintiff of July, 1892, and seven under that of May, 1893. By the terms of an oral agreement not embodied in said written memoranda Plymire promised that whenever he received payment from a customer for a monument he would pay plaintiff an additional sum of twenty-five per cent on the cost price charged him for the same by plaintiff; which further percentage was to be applied on his indebtedness of two thousand five hundred dollars existing before July, 1892. The debts on which the judgments mentioned were recovered against Plymire accrued prior to the receipt by him of any part of the goods in controversy.

         Plymire, it was further understood, would take orders for and sell the marble in his own name; he had the right to fix the selling price and the terms of sale; he was to bear the cost of transporting the marble from San Francisco to Marysville; apparently the marble company exercised no control over his business. The monuments, when seized by defendant, were in the same condition as when received by Plymire from plaintiff, he having done no lettering or other work on them. He testified at the trial: "I was not to sell these monuments in the same condition that I received them.. .. . I have to sell them first and then put on the inscription. .. . If a man wanted a design I showed him a style of monument and told him what it would come to when finished and set up; found out how he wanted it lettered, whether he wished any further design carved on it, and then fixed it up, put a bottom base on it, set it up, and then took the money for it." Before the execution sale plaintiff demanded the property of defendant, the particulars of which demand appear in another connection.

         Appellant contends that the facts stated evidence a sale on credit in which the title to the goods passed at once to Plymire, and they thus became liable to execution for his debts, and it is said that it is "unmeaning for parties to a contract to say it shall not amount to a sale when it contains every element of a sale." This latter proposition is doubtless correct; the transaction must be judged by the intent of the parties to it, gathered from the whole scope and effect of their language and their explanatory conduct; mere verbal formulas are to be disregarded if inconsistent with a specific intent thus manifested. But looking at the facts in the light of this principle we find no transmission of title to Plymire. "Mere transfer of possession without the agreement, express or implied, that such transfer is a sale on the one hand and a purchase on the other, will not be a sale or have the effect to transfer the title." (Borland v. Nevada Bank , 99 Cal. 94; 37 Am. St. Rep. 32.) We consider that the true nature of the transaction was that of a sale upon condition -- the condition being, as to each monument, that Plymire should sell the same to some third person; until then he was under no obligation to pay plaintiff the cost price, and until then he was compellable to surrender the goods to plaintiff upon demand. When he sold a monument he was precisely within the case put by Mellish, L. J., in Ex parte White, 6 L. R. Ch. App. 397, 405: "If A hands over his goods to B, and B is to pay him a certain price if he sells, but is at liberty to sell on what terms he pleases, and B then sells to C, the natural inference from these facts is, beyond all doubt, that there is a sale made to B, and another sale from B to C." But obviously there is no completed sale to B until he sells to C; this is illustrated in Nutter v. Wheeler, 2 Low. Dec. (U.S. Dist. Ct.) 346; there W. & Co. were in the habit of sending their manufactured goods to one Gear in Boston, and Gear sold them at such prices and on such terms as he pleased, not less than the trade prices fixed by W. & Co.; whenever he made a sale he was to pay W. & Co. in thirty days the prices shown in their list to him, less an agreed discount; after a sale was made by him his credit only was looked to by W. & Co.; Gear became bankrupt, and W. & Co. took back the goods of their manufacture in his shop unsold. The court said: "Until a sale was made the property in the goods remained in the defendants [W. & Co.], and they were well justified in reclaiming those which remained on hand at the time of the failure of Gear." So, in our opinion, at the time of the levy and sale by defendant here the monuments were the property of plaintiff and not liable to execution for Plymire's debts.

         As suggested by appellant there may be impolicy in allowing a severance of title and [41 P. 1033] possession where an ultimate sale is designed by the parties, but this consideration is for the legislature and not the courts; the common-law right of the seller by appropriate contract to retain the title until performance of some valid condition on the part of the buyer has been long recognized in this state, as almost universally elsewhere. (Putnam v. Lamphier , 36 Cal. 151; Kohler v. Hayes , 41 Cal. 455; Hegler v. Eddy , 53 Cal. 597; Sere v. McGovern , 65 Cal. 244; Benjamin on Sales, Bennetts' (6th ed.), 255, 282, et seq.) That the property is to be resold by the first (conditional) purchaser does not affect the rule. (Hirsch v. Steele, 10 Utah, 18, and cases cited.)

         Appellant further argues that the written claim to the marble in question served on him by plaintiff prior to the execution sale, under section 689 of the Code of Civil Procedure, is defective in the manner of "setting out the title" and in "stating the grounds of such title," as provided in that section. Waiving the question whether the statute referred to imposes a condition precedent to the right to maintain the action, we think the objection is not tenable; the writing stated, among other things, that plaintiff is the owner of the property, and had delivered it to Plymire for purposes of sale, and that he held it when seized by defendant for those purposes, and not otherwise. The phrase "grounds of such title" in the code section is not very definite, but we suppose it has reference to the reasons why the claimant avers himself to have a title superior to that of the execution debtor; and the explanation in this instance of the manner in which such debtor acquired possession of the property from the claimant, coupled with a statement of the claimant's ownership, seems to be all that should be required in such a case. Some other points are made concerning rulings on matters of evidence at the trial, but they are unimportant; if all were determined in appellant's favor, we cannot see that the result could be affected. The judgment and order appealed from should be affirmed.

         For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion the judgment and order appealed from are affirmed.


Summaries of

Vermont Marble Co. v. Brow

Supreme Court of California
Sep 27, 1895
109 Cal. 236 (Cal. 1895)

In Vermont Marble Co. v. Brow, 109 Cal. 241, [50 Am. St. Rep. 37, 41 P. 1031], it is declared: "The common law right of seller by appropriate contract to retain the title until performance of some valid condition on the part of the buyer has been long recognized in this state as almost universally elsewhere."

Summary of this case from Greene v. Carmichael
Case details for

Vermont Marble Co. v. Brow

Case Details

Full title:ERMONT MARBLE COMPANY, Respondent, v. E. BROW, Appellant

Court:Supreme Court of California

Date published: Sep 27, 1895

Citations

109 Cal. 236 (Cal. 1895)
41 P. 1031

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