Case ID: wend_11/html/0137-01.html
Source: Caselaw Access Project
Author: {"author": "Savage, Ch.. J.", "license": "Public Domain", "url": "https://static.case.law/"}
Date Created: 2024-08-24T03:29:51.129683

Johnson vs. Hunt.
    Where a house builder contracted to build a house and find the materials, for which he was to receive his pay as the work advanced, and after putting up and enclosing the house, worked up in the house plank preparatory to erecting columns for a piazza to the building, and removed the same as a mere matter of convenience to an adjoining house, where they were levied upon by virtue of an execution against the builder; it was held, in an action by the employer for the taking of such materials, that the plaintiff, although he had made advances as the work progressed, was not entitled to mantain an action; the materials being personal property, and not passing to the plaintiff until delivery or until affixed to the freehold.
    This was an action of replevin, tried at the Albany circuit in September, 1831, before the Hon. James Vanderpoel, one of the circuit judges.
    On the 21st August, 1829, a contract was entered into by which the defendant agreed to build a house for the plaintiff, finding the materials for the wood work and doing the work, and engaging to complete the job by the 1st May, 1830. The plaintiff, on his part, engaged to pay for the same $1525, in manner following : when the timber should be delivered on the ground for framing, $100 ; when the frame should be raised, $200 ; on the first of December, $150; the like sum on the first day of each of the four succeeding months, ‘provided the work shall advance according to the payments made ;’ making $1050 to be paid by the first day of April, and the ^remainder, viz. $475, when the house shall be finished. After the house was enclosed, the defendant worked plank belonging to him into eight columns for piazzas, one half of which were intended for the house building for the plaintiff, and the other half for a house which the defendant was then building for a Mr. Earl. These columns were 'worked in the house building for the plaintiff, and to make room for the masons to do their work, the columns were removed to the store of a Mr. Burrows. The defendant also procured and deposited in the same store four carved capitals and three bases for the columns, and six carved window and door caps. After a barn was enclosed, which the defendant was building for the plaintiff on the same lot on which the house was erected, the columns and other materials were removed thereto, and subsequently four of the columns were taken therefrom and used in the erection of Earl’s house. The other columns and the carved work remained in the bam until June or July, 1830, when the defendant broke open the bam and took and carried them away. For this property the action was brought. The plaintiff proved payments made by him to the defendant, to the amount of $1700, and that the defendant, about two weeks previous to taking the property from the barn, abandoned the job he had undertaken, saying he would not work any more at it, unless the plaintiff would pay him more money. It was proved on the part of the defendant, in pursuance of a notice attached to his plea, that on the 5th May, 1830, while the property in question, remained in the store of Burrows, it was levied upon by a deputy of the sheriff of Albany, by virtue of an execution against the defendant for the sum of $556, who left the same in the possession of the defendant. The value of the property was testified to. The judge ruled that the plank from which the columns were worked, though purchased by the defendant, became the property of the plaintiff when the same were delivered upon the plaintiff’s lot; and though the lumber used in preparing the columns in question had not been separated from that used in preparing the columns for Earl’s house at the time of the levy, yet that it was subsequently separated, and that it was reasonable to presume that the defendant intended it for the house of the *plaintiff; and as to the carved work, that though it had not been delivered upon the premises of the plaintiff at the time of the levy, still it had been procured for the plaintiff’s house, and immediately upon its being so procured, and before a delivery upon the premises of the plaintiff, it became the property of the plaintiff. To which decision the defendant excepted. The jury, under the charge of the judge, found a verdict for the plaintiff, which the defendant now moved to set aside.
    J. Paine, for the defendant.
    The ownership of the property claimed in this suit was either in the defendant or in the sheriff of Albany, and of course the plaintiff ought not to have recovered. Until worked into the house and become part of the realty, it was not the property of the plaintiff. Had it been destroyed in the store of Burrows, or while in the barn, the loss would have fallen upon the defendant, and not upon the plaintiff. He cited 1 Taunt. 318, 7 Johns. R. 473, 15 id. 349. 7 Wendell, 406.
    M. T. Reynolds, for plaintiff.
    The cases cited on the other side relate exclusively to personal property. Here the property was connected with the realty. The payments were to be made as the work progressed, and the moment materials appropriated to the building were brought upon the ground, the right of ownership attached in the plaintiff as effectually as when subsequently affixed to the building, as the procuring of the materials and the working of them up for the finishing of the building are fairly to be presumed as the inducements to the advances made by the plaintiff.
   By the Court,

Savage, Ch.. J.

By the contract, the defendant was to procure the materials and build the house, for the plaintiff. The materials were purchased by the defendant, were his own, and at his risk. The fact that such materials were intended for the plaintiff’s house did not change the property. Had the defendant acted as the plaintiff’s agent in purchasing the materials, then indeed the property would have been the plaintiff’s. The con-tract, however, does not*give countenance to any such idea, nor was such a construction contended for. The judge at the circuit held that the property was vested in the plaintiff by the act of the defendant in purchasing it, intending to work it into the plaintiff’s house. In this the judge certainly erred. When the defendant purchased the property, it became his own; he might sell it again, and purchase other materials to use in the plaintiff’s house, and if he procured such as the contract required, the plaintiff could not complain. Suppose he had purchased plank which were rotten and totally unfit for the use, but still intending them for the plaintiff’s house, the plaintiff would not be bound to receive them. Or suppose the plank were purchased in Troy or Albany, or at the mill where manufactured, and before they were removed a fire had destroyed them, would the plaintiff say the loss was his ? If the property was ever in the defendant, when was it changed 1 As personal property, clearly it did not pass until delivery, and there is no evidence in the case of a delivery by the defendant, or the receipt of it by the plaintiff. It was not intended by the contract that it should pass as personal property; it was to become'the property of the plaintiff when it was worked into his house and not before. The mere act of bringing the plank upon the plaintiff’s lot, for the purpose of working it into columns, did not change the property; nor did the act of working the plank into pieces to put up have that effect, for we see the same defendant, at the same time and place, working up other plank of the same lot into materials for columns for Earl’s house. If the act of working the plank in the plaintiff’s house made them his property, then he owned the whole ; but that is not pretended. If the working them with intent to put them up in the plaintiff’s house made them his, then the intent changed the property, without any act by either of the contracting parties. That would be a very unsafe rule of property. The property of one man does not become the property of another, unless by some act indicating a delivery by one and an acceptance by the other. Had the property in question been burned when in Burrow’s store, and had the defendant been perfectly solvent, I presume the plaintiff would not have considered the loss his own ; surely the *Iaw would not so have adjudged it. Where any thing remains to be done by the vendor before the article is to be delivered, the right of property does not pass. 7 Wendell, 406, and cases there cited. Here the columns were to be put together and erected before they became the plaintiff’s.

In the case oí Mucklow v. Mangles, 1 Taunt. 319, a boat builder contracted to build a barge for one Pocock, and received payment in advance. He finished the barge and painted Pocock’s name on the stern ; but before delivery, it was levied on by the sheriff, under an execution against the boat builder. It was held that the property had not passed to Pocock. Heath, J. says it comes within the cases which have been held to be executory. He adds, “ A tradesman often finishes goods which he is making in pursuance of an order given by one person, and sells them to another; yet the person giving the order could not bring trover.” The case of Merritt v. Johnson, 7 Johns. R. 473, was a stronger case than Mucklow v. Mangles. One Travis agreed to build a sloop for E. Merritt, and to furnish the timber for the same. Travis partly finished the sloop, furnishing the greater part of the materials ; but D. Merritt, the plaintiff to whom' the contract was assigned by E. Merritt, also furnished part of the materials and advanced money to Travis on the contract. When the vessel was about one third finished, it was levied on under an execution against Travis. The plaintiff brought an action of trover for the vessel, but the court said that his right of action rested on the contract with Travis, and that the sloop did not become his until finished and delivered. The court take notice of the fact that the sloop was built upon ground hired by Travis; but had the fact been different, I do not see how the result would have been varied under the contract in that case, by which Merritt was to pay as the work progressed, leaving one third to be paid when the whole of the work was finished. In this case there could not be a formal delivery of the house after it was finished; the house, standing on the plaintiff’s ground, became his as fast as the parts added to it became attached, so as to become part of the freehold, but with that difference, the case of the sloop is not distinguishable in principle. The sloop was personal property, and therefore the property was *not changed until delivery. The house in question was real property, but the materials of which it was composed were personal property, and did not pass to the plaintiff until delivery, or until they became affixed to the freehold ; at the time of the levy, they were the property of Hunt, the defendant. The plaintiff therefore had no title, and could not recover upon the evidence before the court.

Hew trial granted ; costs to abide the event.