M'Cullough v. Porter
M'Cullough v. Porter
Opinion of the Court
— A man may certainly give employment to a factor from motives of benevolence, and without an expectation of gain; but he cannot give him the substantial ownership of the goods without its burthens. Unless he retain the title with power to enforce it against the factor himself, he cannot enforce it against the factor’s creditors: the goods fall into the mass of the factor’s effects and are subject to make satisfaction for his debts, as if they had originally belonged to him. And this springs from the policy of the law which discourages every separation of the actual, from the apparent ownership of a chattel. The question then depends on the intention to retain or pass the property between the parties themselves, and not on the presence or absence of the word agent as an addition to the name of the consignee in marking the packages or casks, whose use is to set forth, not the nature of his title to them, but his address for the purpose of having them forwarded. What then was the contract? The plaintiffs simply agreed to consign goods to an insolvent friend, to be sold on their account for not less than the invoice prices; and the proceeds to the value of those prices were to be remitted to them, or the goods returned. Thus the excess of the sales over the invoice prices, was to be the amount of the commissions; and that it was to be contingent, is the only feature of the case which differs it from an ordinary consignment on commission. Hence it is urged, with apparent plausibility, that the same consequences would be produced by a sale. But at whose risk were the goods in the custody of the consignee? The very purpose of the arrangement was to protect them from his creditors; and to effect it, required that they should in reality be the property of the consignors, who must consequently have agreed in good faith to take upon themselves the risks incident to the ownership in order to carry out the plan. Had the goods been destroyed without the fault of the consignee, or sold to those who had become unable to pay for them, the consignors would have been liable to bear the loss: they would have been estopped from alleging the ownership to have been in the consignee by the very object and terms of the agreement, as well as by the stipulated right to put an end to the arrangement by returning the goods, which was rested on an evident supposition that the consignee was to be only an agent. If however the agreement was a trick to cover an understanding inconsistent with its terms, it might be fraudulent in fact; but to declare it so, would be the province of a jury. The opposite conclusion, merely as a legal inference, is to be drawn from the right to return the goods, which shows that the ownership of them was intended to remain in the consignors. Whether the agreement was merely colourable, was left to the jury; and the question of legal fraud was well decided. The only authority which might raise a doubt of it, is Jenkins v. Eichelberger, (4 Watts 121), which however is distinguishable
Judgment affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- M'Cullough against Porter
- Cited By
- 16 cases
- Status
- Published