Dick v. Lindsay & Cooper
Dick v. Lindsay & Cooper
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered March 12, 1853, by
— This is trespass, for seizing and selling goods under legal process. The goods were at the time of the levy, in the possession of the defendant in the executions, but they were claimed by the present plaintiff as his property. The ground of his claim was that, he had bought them at a previous sheriff’s sale, under another execution against the same party, and did not remove them.
When goods are purchased at a private sale, it must be shown that the vendee took and kept possession of them; otherwise the contract is conclusively presumed to be fraudulent, as against creditors of the vendor. But one who buys personal property at a public judicial sale, may leave it with the defendant in the execution, without making it liable to be taken under another execution. It must be left, however, under such a contract ofbailment, as would in law protect it from the bailee’s creditors, if he had never been the owner of it. It may be hired or loaned with safety. But if it be sold, or given, the purchaser parts with his title, and cannot maintain trespass against any body for taking it.
In the present case, the defendant in the execution, was MfMackin, a merchant tailor, and the goods levied on, consisted of the cloths, &e., which were his stock in trade. The plaintiff bought them at the first sheriff’s sale, and left them with their previous owner to be made up and sold as he pleased, and for his own profit, accounting to the plaintiff only for the cost: If these were the facts, (and we assumed them to be so, because
The presumption is, that personal property is owned by him who has it in possession. If another person desires to make out a title, he has the burden of proof, to show how he came by it, and explain the reason why it is not in his own custody. The court was right, therefore, in refusing to affirm that no inference could be legally drawn from the fact of the goods remaining with M£Mackin.
The purchase at the first sale was made for the plaintiff, by an agent whom he sent to the sale for that purpose, and the defendants offered to prove the statements made by the agent at the time of the bidding, in consequence of which it was alleged the goods had been sold at less than their value. This evidence was objected to, but most rightfully admitted. What an agent says about the business of his principal, when he is engaged in doing it, may always be heard, not as mere declarations, but as explaining the character and quality of the act. The words spoken are a part of the thing done. The question here was, whether the purchase was fair, and this could not be determined without ascertaining whether the agent said anything to deter other persons from bidding.
There is another point. The agent declared that his principal was buying the goods for the benefit of .the defendant in the execution, and that every bid against him was a bid against
Judgment reversed and venire facias de novo awarded.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.