Mann v. Salsberg
Mann v. Salsberg
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
The sheriff of Luzerne county having levied upon certain goods in the store of Rosenthal & Son, in the city of Wilkes-Barre, under executions against that firm issued at the suit of the present defendants, the plaintiffs claimed the goods and this issue was framed to determine the validity of that claim. The evidence failed to make it clear that the sale by the plaintiffs to Rosenthal & Son was a Maryland contract. The goods were manufactured in the state of Maryland, but we have no definite information as to where they were at the time of the sale. The evidence indicates a probability that the merchandise was transported from Baltimore to Wilkes-Barre by a common carrier, some unnamed railroad company, but for anything that appears in the case the vendors may have been consignees as well as shippers, and may have delivered the goods at Wilkes-Barre. In the absence of evidence that the contract was to be executed, or was executed, outside the state of Pennsylvania, the transaction was governed by our own laws. There was no sufficient evidence of any misrepresentation, trick or device, practiced by the purchasers at the time of the sale, which would
The claimants in this proceeding, the appellants, having given a bond and taken the goods, the provisions of the Act of May 26, 1897, P. L. 95, clearly required that the value of the goods should be determined by the verdict of the.jury. The appraised value of goods is by the statute made prima facie evidence of the real value, “ but at the trial the real value thereof may be shown to be more or less than the appraised value, and a verdict and judgment may be rendered against' the claimant up to the value of said goods and chattels as so proven.” When said verdict is larger in amount than the claim of the defendant in
The judgment is reversed and a venire facias de novo awarded.
Reference
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- Contracts — Conflict of laws — Evidence. In the absence of evidence that a contract was to be executed, or was executed outside the state of Pennsylvania, the transaction is governed by the law of Pennsylvania. Sale — Insolvency—Rescission—Maryland contract. The rule of the Maryland law that a purchaser who buys goods knowing his insolvency and having no reasonable expectation of paying for the goods •purchased, takes a title voidable at the election of the vendor, does not apply where the evidence establishes that the vendees were indebted at the time of the purchase, and that judgment was sometimes subsequently entered against them; but it fails to give any satisfactory information as to their assets at that time, and such light as it does throw on that point seems to indicate that the value of the stock of goods then iq their store exceeded by a considerable amount the total indebtedness. Where a purchaser has been imposed upon by an actual fraud and misrepresentation, the contract is voidable at the election of the vendor, upon discovery of the fraud. He must rescind promptly upon the discovery, or a conclusive presumption of ratification will arise, but he is not put to his election until he knows, or ought to have known, of the fraud. The right of rescission will not avail when the goods have passed into the hands of an innocent purchaser for value, without notice of the fraud, nor against the execution of a creditor whose debt was contracted, by the fraudulent purchaser, subsequently to his possession under this title. The reseission must be evidenced by some unequivocal act, and the vendor must return whatever he has received under the contract, retaining out of the money that has been paid the value of any goods which may have passed beyond his power to reclaim. When nothing has been paid on the contract and the goods have been levied upon by the sheriff at the suit of another creditor, notice to the sheriff and joining in an interpleader to try the title to the property is a sufficiently explicit declaration of the intention to rescind. As against a creditor whose debt was in existence at the time the debtor fraudulently obtained possession of the property, the vendor may; if not estopped upon other grounds, assert his right to rescind after the goods have been levied upon. Interpleader — Sheriff's interpleader — Act of May 26, 1897, P. L. 95. Where claimants in a proceeding under the interpleader Act of May 26, 1897, P.L. 95, give a bond and take the goods, the value of the goods must be determined by the verdict of a jury. When the verdict is larger in amount than the claim of the defendant in the issue, the execution creditor, the court-will so mould the verdict and the judgment as-to prevent the injustice of giving the creditor more than the amount of his claim.