Court Opinion

ID: 7967199
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 00:51:41.538572+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:34:40.663484
License: Public Domain

Collins, J.
The single question here presented is whether the contract entered into between these parties was an executed one, or simply executory. If the former, the title to the logs, completely identified and described in the writing, vested in the vendee corporation; the risk attendant upon the title and the subsequent loss, *424which was by fire, must be borne by it, unaffected by the fact that the vendor was to make delivery in the Mississippi river.
There is a seeming confusion in the decisions as to when the title to personal property does pass on sale, but it has arisen out of a failure to clearly distinguish between general contracts for the sale of chattels of a certain kind and contracts for the sale of chattels specifically ascertained and identified. It is the result of an omission to discriminate between cases in which the goods have not been specified to which the contract is to attach, those wherein some act remains to be performed before payment or an actual transfer of possession, such as weighing or measuring or counting out of a common mass or parcel, and those in which there has been an appropriation of specific chattels to the contract, and nothing whatever remains to be done except payment in whole or in part, or an actual delivery. In the case at bar there should be no doubt, upon the undisputed facts, that the title vested in the vendee at the date of the agreement. All of the vendor’s logs lying at a certain point upon the bank of the Crow Wing river, the same being duly marked and scaled, were included in the writing, which was signed by both parties. In it the precise number of logs lying upon the bank, the mark which had been placed upon each, the total number of feet therein according to the scale-bill, and the agreed price per thousand feet, were stated with particularity. The terms of payment, about one-third being cash in hand, and the balance, figured out to a penny and to be paid in two instalments, were specified. In every respect it was a completed contract, and the assent of both parties that the title should vest in the purchaser was obvious. Contracts for the purchase and sale of 'chattels, if complete and unconditional, and not within the statute of frauds, are sufficient, as between the parties, to vest the property in the purchaser without delivery. The rule is that when the chattels are clearly designated and appropriated to the contract, are ready for immediate delivery, and the terms of sale, including the price, are explicitly given, there is an executed contract, and the title to the property, as between the parties, passes to the purchaser, even without actual payment or delivery. Hatch *425v. Oil Co., 100 U. S. 124, and cases cited. This statement is simply an amplification of the common-law rule. 2 Bl. Comm. 248; Chitty, Cont. (8th Amer. Ed.) 332; Dixon v. Yates, 5 Barn. & Adol. 313; 2 Kent, Comm. 492; 1 Pars. Cont. 441; 2 Pars. Cont. 320.
Nor does an agreement by the vendor of chattels to transport them to a place named for delivery, or to retain possession for a time, render executory a contract of sale otherwise completed on his part. Terry v. Wheeler, 25 N. Y. 520; McNamara v. Edmister, 11 Hun, 597; Hurff v. Hires, 40 N. J. Law, 581; Willis v. Willis, 6 Dana, 48.
As to the general principles which govern in this class of eases, see Webster v. Anderson, 42 Mich. 554, (4 N. W. Rep. 288;) Muskegon Booming Co. v. Underhill, 43 Mich. 629, (5 N. W. Rep. 1073;) Bethel Steam Mill Co. v. Brown, 57 Me. 9; Phillips v. Moor, 71 Me. 78; Walden v. Murdock, 23 Cal. 540; Macomber v. Parker, 13 Pick. 175; Cleveland v. Williams, 29 Tex. 204; Elgee Cotton Cases, 22 Wall. 180; Nash v. Brewster, 39 Minn. 530, (41 N. W. Rep. 105.) Also Martin v. Hurlbut, 9 Minn. 132, (142,) in which this court referred to the rules laid down in the leading case of Terry v. Wheeler, supra.
Order affirmed.