Quimby v. Lowell
Quimby v. Lowell
Opinion of the Court
Defendant, in possession of a bicycle, which she represented as her property, sold it to tbe plaintiff on May 2, 1895, as plaintiff claims, by absolute sale, part of tbe price being paid at tbe time, tbe balance being on credit; or, as claimed by defendant, by a conditional sale, evidenced by a written contract -signed by
If the written contract controls, the defendant had the right to take the wheel, the plaintiff having failed to make payment according to its terms; and the plaintiff would have no cause of action. If the written contract is set aside, on the ground of fraud, as plaintiff claims it should be, and under the parol contract of sale testified to by plaintiff, it was a sale partly upon credit, the title to the wheel passing to plaintiff upon delivery, the defendant opmmitted a trespass in taking- the wheel from plaintiff; but her remedy would be in tort and not by an action for money had and received, as this action is. There is no evidence that defendant has sold the wheel taken from plaintiff and converted it into money. The plaintiff, therefore, cannot waive the tort and bring assumpsit. It is only when the chattel wrongfully taken has been converted into money, or its equivalent, by the wrong-doer, that the other party can waive the tort and maintain assumpsit for the money actually received. Water Power Co. v. Metcalf, 65 Maine, 41; Railroad v. Mayo, 67 Maine, 470.
But, it is said that at the time of sale, the defendant, though in possession of the wheel, had not legal title thereto, nor authority
It appears that Albert H. Lowell, the defendant’s husband, on July 2, 1894, bought of H. W. McCausland two bicycles, one of which is the one in controversy, and gave his note therefor for one hundred and eighty-five dollars with interest, payable in a second hand bicycle at twenty-five dollars, and in painting a house and stable at one hundred and fifteen dollars, and the balance of forty-five dollars in the first week in January, 1895; and gave McCausland an agreement, in writing, duly recorded, that the bicycles should remain the property of McCausland till the note was fully paid. September 18, 1894, Albert H. Lowell sold the bicycle in controversy to his wife, the defendant in this suit, and gave her a bill of sale of it. Albert Lowell paid to McCausland the second hand bicycle and did the painting, called for by the note, apparently before the sale by him to his wife, leaving due upon the note about forty-five dollars, which was finally paid about February, 1896. Mr. Lowell testifies that he asked McCausland for authority to sell this wheel to his wife, and that although McCausland did not want to change the note and agreement he then held, duly recorded, he told him that “if I [Lowell] wanted to sell her a bicycle it was all right to sell it to her.” If this permission was given by McCausland to Mr. Lowell it authorized a sale to the defendant and McCausland would be estopped to claim the wheel, and the defendant, when she bought of her husband, obtained a perfect title to it. McCausland testifies, when asked if he ever gave permission to Mr. Lowell to sell this wheel, that “he can’t say that he did; ” and again says that he did not give permission. On cross-examination he says that, at the time of the sale to defendant, there was about forty dollars due on Mr. Lowell’s note; that “ Mr. Lowell wanted to fix it in some way so as to release his wife’s wheel,” but nothing of the kind was arrived at; that he can’t say what he told Mr. Lowell, .but no change was made in the
This conduct of McCausland when he knew Mr. Lowell proposed to sell, and after he had sold the wheel, overcomes his argumentative denial of authority, and really gives force and effect to the positive testimony of Mr. Lowell, that McCausland told him that he might sell the wheel. It would estop him from claiming property in it against the plaintiff. The decided preponderance of evidence establishes the proposition that Mr. Lowell had authority from McCausland to sell the wheel to his wife, or that the sale was ratified by him. She, therefore, obtained perfect title thereto from her husband, and of course could convey good title to plaintiff.
The verdict is so clearly wrong, that we feel that the jury must have misapprehended the force and effect of the evidence. It should not be allowed to stand.
Motion sustained.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Agnes Quimby v. Alice B. Lowell
- Status
- Published