Court Opinion

ID: 8779536
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-26 13:13:43.876516+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:02:45.775365
License: Public Domain

ADAMS, Circuit Judge
(after stating the facts as above). In the view we take of this case it is unimportant to dwell upon the arrangement between George E. Parlett and his wife, Anna B. Parlett, in-terveners here, and the two consignor companies. Suffice it to say the evidence shows that the Carpet Company was at the time of the transfer insolvent, and that the Parletts paid no consideration to that company' for the goods transferred to them. If, therefore, the goods belonged to the Carpet Company the transfer was without consideration and in fraud of the rights of its creditors. If they belonged to the consignors the transferees stand in their shoes and acquired their rights of property only.
The question then is whether the title to the goods on hand at the end of the contract period, July 1, 1909, passed to the Carpet Company or remained in the consignors. If the latter be the case, the trustee in bankruptcy had no concern with them. If the former, he is their owner, and the interveners were properly nonsuited.
The contracts in question were primarily contracts of agency for the sale of the consignors’ goods for a period ending July 1, 1909. Goods were to be intrusted to the agent by them for sale and any that were actually sold prior to that time were the goods of the principals, and the proceeds less the commission reserved belonged to them and had to be accounted for. Whether this relation of agency ceased on July 1, 1909, depends upon the true interpretation of this clause of the contract:
“The party of the second part [the agent] agrees * * * at the final termination of this agreement to buy and pay for at the then current prices and the regular terms such goods as may be then on hand.”
In Sturm v. Boker, 150 U. S. 312, 329, 14 Sup. Ct. 99 (37 L. Ed. 1043), it is said:
“The recognized distinction between bailment and sale is that when the identical article is to be returned in the same or in some altered form, the contract is one of bailment, and the title is not changed. On the other hand, when there is no obligation to return the specific article, and the receiver is at liberty to return another thing of value, he becomes a debtor to make the return, and the title to the property is changed; the transaction is a sale.”
In Re Columbus Buggy Co., 74 C. C. A. 611, 143 Fed. 859, 861, this court said:
“The power to require the restoration of the subject of the agreement is an indelible incident of a contract of bailment.”
The contracts before us, disclosing no obligation or right in the agent to return the undisposed of goods to the consignors but the contrary and inconsistent obligation “to buy and pay for them,” are, *203therefore, in our opinion, not contracts of bailment. They stand on a different footing from the goods received and sold before the expiration of the contract period. These undoubtedly were bailments, and it is equally clear, we think, that the goods remaining undisposed of on July 1st, became by virtue of the provisions of the contracts, the property of the erstwhile bailees.
It is suggested that the clause of the contracts under consideration is executory, imposing an obligation to do something in the future rather than constituting a conclusive and final sale of such goods as might remain undisposed of at the end of the contract period.
If the clause had read:
“The party of the second part” (the agent) “agrees * * * at the final termination of this agreement to pay for” (instead of “to buy and pay for”) “* * * such goods as may be then on hand”—
we think it could not be successfully claimed that the obligation to keep and pay for the goods was executory. A written obligation to “buy and pay for” goods in one’s possession at a given fixed time does not seem essentially different from an obligation “to pay for” them at that time; and when we are striving to ascertain the intention of practical men in the language employed in a business contract, it is difficult to imagine that such minds would regard the two obligations thus expressed as at all different. Let us suppose the goods had been destroyed by fire while in the possession of the agent charged as it was with the obligation “to buy and pay for them”; can it he doubted that the consignors could have recovered from the agent the price which it had agreed to pay for them? We think not.
The contracts in their main and substantial aspect were, as already stated, agency contracts for a year’s period. The object obviously was to dispose of as much merchandise as possible during that period. What would promote that object more than an obligation imposed upon the agent to keep and pay for such goods as it did not sell? It was, we think, in this natural and serviceable sense that the words of the contract in question creating the obligation “to buy and pay for” were employed. By requiring the agent to keep and pay for such goods as it did not sell to the trade during the year the business would naturally be promoted and the agency could he at once automatically and effectually wound up at the end of the year. This, in our opinion, was the clear intent and meaning of the parties in using the words “to buy and pay for,” and under well-recognized rules of construction we should recognize and enforce it if possible. Moreover, there does not appear to have been any scope for the operation of an executory promise to buy.
Before the end of the year goods had been delivered to the Carpet Company for two purposes; some to be sold to the trade for account of the consignors, and the remainder to he paid for by the Carpet Company at current prices. Those that remained undisposed of at the end of the year were the subject of ready identification and thereby became the definite and certain subject of sale. The consignors had nothing to do but accept the purchase price. They had no option to take the goods or legal right to get them. The Carpet Company had *204no legal right to return them. Its right as well as its obligation was to pay for them and that was all.
In view of these facts, we fail to discover any occasion or opportunity for further bargaining. The contracts as originally made operated proprio vigore upon a subject of sale which was to become and had become definite and certain.
It is said in Mechem on Sales, vol. 1, § 2:
“There may be an agreement whose legal effect is that the title shall not pass until a future time, either because, in the case of an ascertained chattel, something remains to happen or be performed which the parties have treated as precedent, or because the particular chattel whose title is to be so transferred has not yet been ascertained. This is an agreement to sell, called often, for purposes of further distinction, ‘an executory sale.’ It does not become a sale until the precedent event has happened or the condition has been performed. It then becomes a sale by force of the present agreement aided or completed by the happening of that event or the performance of that condition.”
This is our view of the present case. The original contracts, on July 1, 1909, operated upon the undisposed of goods, and by force of their provisions transferred the title at once and unconditionally to the Carpet Company, on the terms specified. This, we think, expresses the intention of the contracting parties as manifested by the whole instruments,' the objects to be accomplished and the conduct of the parties.
- Counsel for intervenors invoke the doctrine of the following cases in support of their claim to the property in question: In re Galt, 56 C. C. A. 470, 120 Fed. 64, John Deere Plow Co. v. McDavid, 70 C. C. A. 422, 137 Fed. 802, In re Columbus Buggy Company, 74 C. C. A. 611, 143 Fed. 859, and In re Pierce, 85 C. C. A. 14, 157 Fed. 757, and other like cases, but we fail to see how that doctrine has any application to this case. Those cases decided that, the contracts involved in them when properly construed were contracts of bailment or agency as distinguished from conditional sales, and as a result that the consignor’s title to property which had been delivered to the bailee or agent was good as against the trustee in bankruptcy of the estate of the agent. This case on the contrary concerns property held by the Carpet Company with no option or right to return to the consignor and, therefore, not as a bailee or agent but with a duty and obligation to take and pay for it and, therefore, as the owner.
A patient investigation of authorities fails to disclose any adjudication upon the exact facts disclosed in this case. But we think the principles announced in the following cases dealing with very similar state of facts as those now before us lead unerringly to the conclusion we have reached. Conable v. Lynch, 45 Iowa, 84; Norton v. Fisher, 113 Iowa, 595;1 Fish v. Benedict, 74 N. Y. 613; Ætna Powder Co. v. Hildebrand, 137 Ind. 462, 37 N. E. 136, 45 Am. St. Rep. 194; Arbuckle v. Gates & Brown, 95 Va. 802, 30 S. E. 496; Mack v. Drummond Tobacco Co., 48 Neb. 397, 67 N. W. 174, 58 Am. St. Rep. 691; O’Neal v. Stone, 79 Mo. App. 279; Potter v. Mt. Vernon Roller Mill Co., 101 Mo. App. 581, 73 S. W. 1005.
The court below rightly held that the interveners were not entitled to the relief souerht, and its decree is affirmed.

 86 N. W. 801.