McCorvey v. Potvin
McCorvey v. Potvin
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Appellant purchased certain personal property with which he fitted up a yard for the manufacture of brick. After the same was thus fitted up he put one E. L. Clark in possession thereof, and at the same time entered into an agreement with him that upon the performance of certain conditions on his part he, the appellant, would turn overall the machinery and other articles of personal property in said yard to said Clark. At the same time, and as a part of the same transaction, said Clark executed and delivered to said appellant a bill of sale in due form of said property. Said bill of sale was placed upon record in the auditor’s office of the county in which the property was situated. Said Clark failed to perform any of the conditions of such contract on his part. While he was in possession thereof such property was attached as the property of said Clark, and the sole question presented by the record in this case and argued by counsel is as to where the title of said property must be held to be, as between said appellant and said attaching creditor. That the contract executed at the time said Clark was placed in possession of the property did not transfer the title thereof to
But it is said that the action of said appellant in taking and recording said bill of sale had the effect of misleading those from whom said Clark should seek credit, and that appellant was therefore estopped from now asserting title by virtue of the contract above referred to. "We cannot give such force to the transaction. The bill of sale purported to convey the absolute title to said appellant, and it is only by asserting its illegality upon some technical rule as to its execution that it can be deprived of that effect. By receiving and recording it, appellant asserted that the title to the property was in him, and it does not now lie in the mouth of said Clark, or any of his creditors, to assert that such bill of sale is ineffectual for the purposes for which it was executed, and at the same time claim that its execution and acceptance estop the appellant from asserting a title which he had independent of such execution and of the rights derived under the bill of sale so executed. In our opinion, the complaint stated a cause of action, and the demurrer thereto should have been overruled.
The judgment must be reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
Anders, C. J., and Stiles and Scott, JJ., concur.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting.) — I do not think the two instruments executed can be explained on any other theory than that it was the understanding of the parties that the title
Reference
- Full Case Name
- John E. McCorvey v. Fabin S. Potvin, Intervenor and
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- SALE — CONSTRUCTION OE CONTRACT. Where the owner of certain personal property places a person in possession thereof under an agreement that, upon the performance of certain conditions, he would turn over to the latter all such property, the fact that, as a part of the same transaction and contemporaneously therewith, the party receiving such property gave a bill of sale thereof to the owner, cannot be construed as changing the effect of the contract so as to pass title from the owner to such person. (Dunbae, J., dissents.)