Judges: Shepherd
Filed Date: 9/5/1890
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The plaintiff, James w. Tufts, offered in evidence a contract, a copy of which, marked "Exhibit A," is hereto attached and made a part of the statement of facts.
J. S. Griffin, the defendant in the action, was introduced by the plaintiff, and testified that he "executed the contract marked ``Exhibit A.' The consideration was the soda fountain described in the (48) *Page 70 contract. I received the soda fountain, and I have not paid the sum of $162.50 mentioned, nor any part thereof; the reason I did not pay was because I did not think I owed the plaintiff; the apparatus was burned in the fire, and I thought it was his loss, and not mine; I executed another note like this, which has been paid; the fire was 4 November, 1888; the fire commenced in the adjoining storehouse; my house caught from that; I was careful in regard to fire; I had no clerk and closed every night myself, and was careful."
The defendant then proposed to prove by the witness that plaintiff had at no time offered to replace the fountain burned up, and the plaintiff objected. Objection sustained, and the defendant excepted, and assigns this ruling of the court as the first ground of error.
The defendant then proposed to prove by the witness, that the defendant had at all times been willing, able and ready to pay the sum demanded, if the plaintiff would replace the fountain burned up by the fire. Objection by the plaintiff. Objection sustained, and defendant excepts, and assigns the ruling of the court as the second ground of error.
Upon the foregoing evidence, the court directed the jury to answer the issue as follows:
"What sum, if any, is the defendant due the plaintiff? Answer: $162.50, with interest from 1 November, 1889."
The defendant excepted to the direction of the court, and assigns the same as the third ground of error.
The issue having been found as above, and motion for a new trial having been made and denied the defendant, judgment was rendered in accordance with the verdict in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant, from which the defendant appealed to the Supreme Court.
(49)
$162.50. LEWISTON, N.C. 13 June, 1888.
For value received 1 November, 1889, after date, I promise to pay to the order of James W. Tufts, $162.50, with interest at 6 per cent. The consideration in this and other notes is the following described soda-water fountain; One 8.1 Ham. Bord. Alaska Spray, No. 1,486; two ten-gallon and one six-gallon copper founts; one three Sterling generator, which I have received of said James W. Tufts.
Nevertheless, it is understood and agreed by and between me and the said James W. Tufts, that the title to the above-mentioned property does not pass to me, and that until all said notes are paid, the title to aforesaid property shall remain in the said James W. Tufts, who shall *Page 71 have the right, in case of non-payment at maturity of either of said notes, and without process of law, may enter and retake immediate possession of said property wherever it may be, and remove the same.
J. S. GRIFFIN.
Witness: D.C. WINSTON.
This is a case of the first impression in this State. We have here an absolute promise of the defendant to pay the plaintiff a certain sum, it being the balance of the purchase-money due the plaintiff upon the sale of a soda apparatus to the defendant. The sale was a conditional one (seeClayton v. Hester,
The question is, who shall bear the loss? The defendant insists (50) that it should fall upon the plaintiff, because the transaction amounted to nothing more than an executory agreement to sell, and that, inasmuch as the plaintiff cannot now perform the contract, the defendant should not be compelled to pay. It is very true that such contracts are sometimes called executory (as in the case of Ellison v.Jones,
The recent decision in Tufts v. Burnley,
As is said in the foregoing extract, the vendor has done all that he was required to do, and the transaction amounted to "a conditional sale, to be defeated upon the nonperformance of the conditions. . . . The vendee had an interest in the property which he could convey, and which was attachable by his creditors, and which could be ripened into an absolute title by the performance of the conditions." 1 Whart. Cont., 617.
The vendee had the actual legal and rightful possession, with a right of property upon the payment of the money. Vincent v. Cornell,
The vendor could not have interfered with this possession "until a failure to perform the conditions." Newhall v. Kingsbury,
Having acquired these rights under the contract, and the property having been subjected to the risks incident to the exercise of the exclusive right of possession, it would seem against natural justice, to say that there was no consideration for the promise and that the loss should fall upon the plaintiff.
(52) Swallow v. Emery,
No error.
Cited: Whitlock v. Lumber Co.,