Masoner v. Bell

Decision Date13 April 1908
Docket NumberCase Number: 462 Ind Ter T
Citation20 Okla. 618,95 P. 239,1908 OK 54
PartiesMASONER et al. v. BELL.
CourtOklahoma Supreme Court
Syllabus

¶0 1. APPEAL--Review--Bill of Exceptions--Failure to Preserve. Where a motion to require plaintiff to make his complaint more definite and certain is not preserved in the bill of exceptions, this court cannot review the action of the trial court in passing upon such motion.

2. SALES--Passing Title--Delivery--Payment. Where there is a sale of goods to be paid for in cash on delivery, payment and delivery are concurrent acts. In such case payment is a condition precedent to passing title to the vendee, and if on delivery of the goods payment is refused, and the same are appropriated by him to his own use, an action against him for the value will lie by the vendor.

Error from the United States Court in the Indian Territory, Southern District at Pauls Valley; before Hosea Townsend, Judge.

Action in conversion by Lizzie Bell against John Masoner and others. Judgment for plaintiff, and defendants bring error Affirmed.

On December 1, 1899, defendant in error, Lizzie Bell, here after called plaintiff, brought suit before the United States Commissioner at Pauls Valley against plaintiffs in error John Masoner and Sam Garvin, hereafter called defendants, and recovered judgment against them in conversion for one bale of cotton in the sum of $ 34.25. They appealed, and on March 26, 1902, on trial anew in the United States Court in the Indian Territory, Southern District, at the same place, plaintiff again recovered judgment for $ 39.55 and costs. On March 29, 1902, defendants filed a motion for a new trial, which was overruled by the court and exceptions duly noted, and on May 27, 1902, filed their bill of exceptions and prosecuted a writ of error to the United States Court of Appeals in the Indian Territory, and the case is now before us as successor of that court.

To maintain the issues on her part plaintiff introduced in evidence a chattel mortgage made by defendant Masoner to her on April 26, 1899, on "my entire crop of corn and cotton on the Jones farm," to secure a promissory note of that date for $ 78.23, due from him to her October 15, 1899, with interest at 10 per cent. per annum from date, also introduced in evidence and proved to be unpaid. She also proved that after one bale of the cotton covered by the mortgage had been baled her husband, as her agent, and Masoner, the mortgagor, went to the gin where it was, and while there mutually agreed that Mr. Goss, who was in charge of the gin, should send the bale to Pauls Valley and sell it and bring the money back for plaintiff, who was to apply it to the mortgage debt; that pursuant to this understanding Goss, about October 7, 1899, acting through S. H. Long, turned the bale over to him with instructions to take it to Pauls Valley, "sell it, and bring the money back to him." Long took the cotton, together with another bale, conveyed them to Pauls Valley, sold them to defendant Garvin, and testified:

"* * * I was fixing to put the money in my pocketbook, and when I reached over for the other money for the other bale Mr. Lowe was sitting there and Mr. Garvin was sitting to his left a little. Mr. Lowe turned round and said to Mr. Garvin: 'Don't John Masoner owe us something here?' Mr. Garvin says: 'Yes; Just keep that.' And then Mr. Lowe reached over and got it, and I told them at the time I didn't want to get into any trouble over this cotton business, and Mr. Garvin spoke up and says, 'I will see that you get in no trouble,' and wrote a little note for me to carry back to Mr. Goss, and I carried it back to him."

The note is as follows:

"S. J. Garvin, General Merchandise Cotton and Grain Buyer. Pauls Valley, Ind. T., Oct. 7, 1899. Received of S. H. Long thirty-four and 25-100 dollars, on account of John Masoner, being the proceeds of one bale of cotton, No. 495--6.92 1/2. S.J. Garvin, by L."

Garvin paid nothing for the cotton. The bale weighed 495 pounds, and was worth 6.92 1/2, in all $ 34.25. Shortly thereafter the witness Howard went to Garvin with the brands of the cotton, and told him plaintiff had a mortgage on it, and made demand of it for plaintiff, and threatened suit if the same was not returned. Garvin told him to sue. Witness hunted for the bale in Garvin's cotton yard, but could not find it. The husband of plaintiff, still acting as her agent, "phoned" Garvin that his wife had a mortgage on the cotton, but did not get any satisfaction about it. He then saw Garvin about it, who told him he would not pay for the cotton, and that plaintiff would have to sue for it if she got anything. He also went to the cotton yard, but could not find the cotton.

These are undisputed facts in the case, which went to the jury on evidence adduced by plaintiff alone, and the instructions of the court.

W. A. Ledbetter, S. T. Bledsoe, and J. B. Thompson, for plaintiffs in error.

Johnson & Rennie, for defendant in error.

TURNER, J.

¶1 (after stating the facts as above). The first assignment of error herein is that the court erred in overruling the motion of the defendants to require plaintiff to make her complaint more definite and certain; but as the motion is not brought into the record by being set forth in the bill of exceptions, or its overruling assigned as error in the motion for a new trial, we cannot consider it. 3 Enc. Pl. & Pr. 392, and cases cited; Fisher v. United States, 1 Okla. 252, 31 P. 195; Swope v. Smith, 1 Okla. 283, 33 P. 504; Lake Erie R. R. Co. v. Clark, 7 Ind. App. 155, 34 N.E. 587, 52 Am. St. Rep. 442.

¶2 The next assignment of error is that the court erred in refusing to instruct the jury as follows:

"The court erred in refusing to instruct the jury, at the request of the defendants: 'We want to request the court to instruct the jury that, if they should find that the plaintiff in this action had authorized the sale of the cotton--Goss, I believe, is the party's name--had authorized Goss to make a sale of the property, and Goss, in pursuance of that authority, had sent the cotton down here to be sold, and the same was sold to Sam Garvin, the fact that the money was not surrendered in accordance with any agreement had with the plaintiff in the case would not relieve her from her consent given to the sale. And her consent would entitle the defendants to a verdict in the case.'"

¶3 This instruction, in effect, would have told the jury that the consent of the plaintiff to the sale was the only thing necessary to pass the title of this property to Garvin under the circumstances, and that it did not matter whether he paid for it or not; that this action would not lie. In support of this contention they cite abundance of authority to show that: "In an action for conversion by the mortgagee of the mortgaged chattel the defendant may show that he bought it from the mortgagor, and that the mortgagee assented by parole to the sale." (Jones on Chattel Mortgages (4th Ed.) § 465; Cobbey on Chattel Mortgages, § 637; New England Mortgage Security Co. v. Great Western Elevator Co., 6 N.D. 407, 71 N.W. 130; Benedict v. Farlow, 1 Ind. App. 160, 27 N.E. 307.)

¶4 This proposition of law is undoubtedly sound where there has been a sale, but the undisputed facts in this case show that there was no sale. Long, the agent of both the mortgagor and the mortgagee, was certainly authorized to make a sale of this bale of cotton, but he was only authorized to make a cash sale. And in his own language he was only authorized to "sell it and bring the money back to him [Goss]." The fact that the purchase money was set apart by Garvin, and afterwards, and before Long could accept it, was withdrawn, shows conclusively that such only was intended when the cotton was delivered to Garvin. The question of law then arises, does the title to property sold and delivered for cash pass to the...

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