Azro A. Reed v. Martin C. Rowell

Decision Date16 October 1926
Citation134 A. 641,100 Vt. 41
PartiesAZRO A. REED v. MARTIN C. ROWELL
CourtVermont Supreme Court

May Term, 1926.

ACTION OF TORT for the wrongful sale of certain cows sold conditionally. Plea, general denial and statement of facts relied upon in defense. Trial by court in vacation subsequent to June Term, 1925, Orange County, Moulton, J., presiding. Judgment for the plaintiff. The defendant excepted. The opinion states the case.

Judgment affirmed.

Theriault & Hunt for the defendant.

March M. Wilson and Stanley C. Wilson for the plaintiff.

Present POWERS, SLACK, and FISH, JJ., and GRAHAM, Supr. J.

OPINION
POWERS

This is a tort action for the wrongful sale of certain cows on which the plaintiff held security. The trial below was by court, and judgment was for the plaintiff. The defendant alleges error.

It appears from the findings that the plaintiff sold the defendant twenty-one head of cattle, taking therefor a conditional sale note for $ 1,240, which represented the full purchase price, and was duly recorded. The defendant was a cattle dealer and bought these cows for re-sale--as the plaintiff well knew; and the plaintiff consented to such re-sale on condition that the avails be forthwith applied on the note. The defendant sold ten of the cows for $ 800, and at his request, the plaintiff consented that he should use this money in buying other cows. Afterwards, the defendant sold the other cows covered by the lien note, for sums aggregating $ 625.50.

When the plaintiff consented to the defendant's use of the $ 800, he agreed to wait for it until October 1; the defendant did not pay it then, but in November, on plaintiff's demand, he paid $ 300, and a few days later he paid $ 500. Most of this money came from cows covered by the plaintiff's lien, but he did not know it, and it was paid and received as the avails of the ten cows first sold as above stated. When it was paid, the plaintiff did not know that any other cows had been sold. In these circumstances, it avails the defendant nothing that the plaintiff in fact received the money obtained by the defendant for the cows sold after the ten cows went.

That an unconditional license to sell mortgaged personalty operates as a waiver of the security so far as the purchaser is concerned, is well established. Rogers v Whitney, 91 Vt. 79, 82, 99 A. 419, and cases cited and though such license be conditioned that the mortgagor or conditional vendee turn the proceeds over to the security-holder, the purchaser gets good title, whether the seller fulfills his agreement or not. Ufford v Winchester, 69 Vt. 542, 544, 38 A. 239. But as between the parties to a conditional license like the one here invoked, the rule is and should be that the condition is binding, and compliance therewith is necessary to justify and validate the sale. St. Louis Drug Co. v. Robinson, 81 Mo. 18, 24. See, also, Oklahoma Cattle Loan Co. v. Wright, (Mo. App.), 268 S.W. 712, 714. It was this very distinction which this Court had in mind, when in Armington v. Houston, 38 Vt. 448, 452, 91 Am. Dec. 366, it said arguendo, that: "Where property is sold upon a condition that the title is not to pass until payment, but upon the understanding that it is to be sold by the buyer in the ordinary course of his business, the seller would be estopped from asserting any right to it adverse to the right of one who should purchase it in good faith and without notice of the condition; but, as between the original parties, we think that the right to the property should be determined according to their intention and contract." Any other conclusion would be plainly unjust. What this defendant seeks to avail himself of is a parol license; but such license was subject to a condition which the defendant has failed to perform, and which he seeks to repudiate. Such a license is contractual in character; it is bilateral. One cannot secure its benefits unless he abides all its terms. He cannot avail himself of a part of his agreement and repudiate the rest. This defendant's right to sell the cows in question depended upon his performance of the condition attached to the plaintiff's permission; and having failed to so perform, the defendant stands as one who sold without permission. St. Louis Drug Co. v. Robinson, supra....

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10 cases
  • Elizabeth Paska Et Al v. Bert H. Saunders
    • United States
    • Vermont Supreme Court
    • January 7, 1931
    ... ... the purchasers from Tony Paska were concerned. Reed v ... Rowell, 100 Vt. 41, 434, 134 A. 641. As regarded the ... was error. In re Estate of Martin, 92 Vt. 362, 370, ... 104 A. 100. But prejudice does not affirmatively ... ...
  • Vermont Acceptance Corporation v. Romaine W. Wiltshire
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    • Vermont Supreme Court
    • January 7, 1931
    ... ... 502; Manley Bros. v. Somers, ... 100 Vt. 292, 137 A. 336; Reed v. Rowell, ... 100 Vt. 41, 134 A. 641; Smith v. Ladrie, 98 ... Vt. 429, ... ...
  • Vermont Evaporator Co. v. Taft
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    • Vermont Supreme Court
    • October 1, 1935
    ... ... Eastman v. Jacobs, 104 Vt. 536, 538, 539, ... 162 A. 382, and Reed v. Rowell, 100 Vt. 41, ... 134 A. 641, therein cited, are full authority ... ...
  • Dale Eastman v. Kenneth Jacobs
    • United States
    • Vermont Supreme Court
    • October 18, 1932
    ... ... reasonably be done. Reed v. Hendee, 100 Vt ... 351, 354, 355, 137 A. 329, and cases cited. The ... transactions. In Reed v. [104 Vt. 539] ... Rowell, 100 Vt. 41, 44, 134 A. 641, 642, where a ... conditional seller brought ... ...
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