Judges: Paxson
Filed Date: 10/22/1880
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/18/2024
It has long been an established rule in Pennsylvania that a sale and delivery of personal property, with an agreement that the ownership shall remain in the vendor until the purchase money is paid, is fraudulent and void as to the creditors of the vendee and innocent purchasers. Yet there are exceptions to the rule that possession must accompany the ownership of chattels. It was said by Tilghman, C. J., in Martin v. Mathiot, 14 S. & R., 214, that “there are certain necessary and lawful contracts by which the owner parts with the possession, and yet fraud cannot be presumed. Such are the contracts of lending and hiring, both very useful, and without which society could not exist. It is of the essence of these that the owner should give up the possession for a time.” Various devices have been resorted to at times to evade the above rule, but it is believed, in the long line of cases upon this subject, it has not been substantially departed from. There have been numerous cases of bailment, some of them perhaps very close upon the border, where no present contract of sale is made, that have been excepted from the operation of the rule. Any apparent conflict between decided cases is doubtless owing to the difficulty of applying the principle referred to, to the facts of a particular case.
The transaction between the plaintiffs below and O. B. Carpenter was not a bailment either in form or substance. It was not a lending of the goods, nor was it a contract of hiring. It was a sale of the furniture for a stipulated sum or price, and was so charged upon the plaintiffs’ books. The delivery, however, was made upon an agreement signed by Carpenter to pay “not less than five dollars for each succeeding week until the above amount ($113.75,
A number of authorities were cited as sustaining the ruling of the court. A brief reference to them may not be out of place. Clark v. Jack, 7 Watts, 375, was a loan of personal property, subject to be turned into a sale at a future time upon compliance with certain conditions. It was said by the court, “ Properly speaking, there was not a sale, but a contract to sell at a future day; and the delivery in the .meantime was a loan subject to be turned into a sale by compliance with certain conditions.” Myers v. Harvey, 2 Penrose & Watts, 478, was a clear case of bailment. The personal property in question had been purchased at a sherifif’s sale, and left in the possession of the defendant under a lease from the purchaser. In Lehigh Co. v. Field, 8 W. & S., 232, there was merely an agreement for a future sale. There was no present sale between the parties; the boatmen were the servants of the company; the boats in question remained in the ostensible ownership of the company; they retained their places on the company’s register, and were not distinguishable from their other boats; the men had merely the privilege of buying them at a future time when a bill of sale was to be made therefor. Rose v. Story, 1 Barr, 190, is an authority so strongly the other way that we need not discuss it. No fault is found with the principle citéd therefrom, that ‘‘where, by the terms of the contract the vendee receives a chattel to keep for a certain time, and then to become the owner of it if he has paid the stipulated price; otherwise, to pay for its use, he receives it as bailee, and the property is not changed until the price is paid.” This principle does not apply here, for we have no such facts. Rowe v. Sharp, 1 P. F. S., 26, was a bailment. Sharp, by writing, let to Goff two billiard tables for nine months, Goff to use them at his place of business, pay a certain sum for their use. and at the end of the term to re-deliver
The judgment is reversed, and judgment non obstante veredicto for the defendant upon the reserved point.