KE1047.B27"l9or""''-"'"'^ ''''le conditional sales acts :being an ann 3 1924 016 959 755 Cornell University Library The original of this book is in the Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/cletails/cu31924016959755 THE Conditional Sales Acts BEING AN ANNOTATION OF THE Act Respecting Conditional Sales of Chattels (R. S. O. (1897) Cap. J 49) AND AMENDMENTS THERETO TO WHICH IS APPENDED A C()MPI>ETE SET OF FORMS JOHN AUGUSTUS BARRON, K.C. (Judge of the County Court^of the County of Perth) AUTHOR OF " Barron on Bills of Sale and Chattel Mortgages" SECOND EDITION TORONTO : THE GARSWELT, COMPANY, LIMITED 1907 /2f ^^/ & Entered according: to tlie Act of the Parliament of Canada, in the year one thousand nine hundred and seven, by The Caksvvell Co., Limited, in the Office of the Minister of Agriculture. TORONTO I'ltTNTBD BY THE CAESWELL CO. 28-30 Artelaide SI. East. PREFACE TO FIRST EDITION. The idea of compiling this little work was suggested to me from a knowledge that in the vast majority of cases, when the transaction was a business one, the vendor of a chattel himself avoided a compliance with the Bills of Sale and Chattel Mortgage Acts by retaining in himself the property in the chattel nntil payment therefor by the vendee. The result of this practice in many instances has proved most disastrous to innocent persons, and the pas- sage of the Statute, endeavoured to be annotated, must be hailed with delight, for in a measure at all events it will afford some little protection to the public, of whom there are many too apt to assume from the circumstances of a man^s possessions that he is financially that which in reality he is not. In the hope, then, that m}' efforts may be of some use and of some benefit, not alone to the profession but to the business nien and manufacturers, I present to the public my many days' labour in the shape of this work. J. A. B. Lindsay, Dec. 19th, 1889. PJiEFACE TO SECOND EDITION. Since the first edition of my annotation of the Statutes relating to Conditional Sales was issued, now several years ago, the use in business of this form of transaction has largely increased, and as a result many cases have since then been decided, in some instances changing the law, and in some cases modifying it. I venture to think that it is not too soon to ofEer the profession a second edition, which I trust will be found useful to them, at least as a work of reference. J. A. B. Stratford, April 5th, 1907. CONTENTS E. S. 0. 1907 cap. 149, section 1 1 6 Edw. vii. cap. 19 87 88 91 • 95 100 101 117 131 138 Forms 141 Index of Subjects 189 9. 10. INDEX OF CASES. A. PAGE Abell V. Craig 36 Ablett V. Blasham 80, 81 Adams v. Hunt, 69 Albert v. Grosvenor Trust Co 114, 116 Aldridge v. Johnston 19 Alexander v. Corvell, 73 Allen V. Allen 79 Allen V. Spencer ; 94 Am. and Eng. Bncy. Law, Vol. 6 7 Am. and Eng. Ency. Law, Vol. 7 58 Am. and Eng. Ency. Law. Vol. 13 128, 130 Am. and Eng. Ency. Law, Vol. 15 133 Am. and Eng. Ency. Law, Vol. 20 59 American Investment Co. v. Sexton 130 Anderson v. Caplin 59 Anderton ats. "Wilson 37 Appleton ^ . Norwalk 48 Archangels v. Thompson 101 Armour v. Grant 5 Armstrong v. Ausman 68 Arnold v. Playter 50, 51, 108, 109, 112 Artistic Colour Plating Co., In re 52 Ashbury, In re. Ex parte '. 133 Atkinson v. Bell 19 Atkinson v. Ritchie 28 Attenborough v. Thompson 80 Aultman v. Silha 4 Ayerst v. Jenkins 57 B. Babcock v. McParland , 114 Bailey v. Croft 64 Bailey v. Schell 13 Baker v. Denning 69 Bald V. Hagar 127 Baldwin v. Blenjamin 22, 47 Ballard v. Burgett 8, 45 Banin v. Robertson 77 Bank of Columbia v. Lawrence 103 Bank of Geneva v. Hewlett 103 Bank of Manchester v. Slasou 103 VIU IN1>EX OF CASES. PAGE Bank of Toronto v. Panning 121 Blanks v. Martin 63 Banks v. Robinson 17, 42, 55 Banque Hochelaga v. Waterous 16, 22 Barber v. Morton 31 Barker v. Plodgson 28 Barmester ■> . Barron 101 Barrington v. Skinner 76 Barron on Bills of Sale 317 Barry \ . Bennett 63 Barwick ats. Headcliffe 36 Beadon v. Parrott 15 Beard ,. Carroll 9, 41, 62, 92, 94 Beaver v. Lord Oxford 56 Becker v. A\'oods 69 Beckman v. Jarvis 21, 75, 98 Bell V. Hagerstowu Bank 101 Beneker v. Emmany 137 Bemacleug'h y. Poolman 117 Benner v. Puffer 54 Benjamin on Sales 2, 3, 38, 42, 48, 70 Bennett ats. C'rofoot 19 Bernard y. Goggs 24, I'o. H'< Bernard ats. Coggs 28 Biddle v. Bond 37 Bingham v. Bettison 114, 116 Birch V. Dawson 74 Bishop V. Cook 84, 88, 90 Bishop V. Elliott 133 Blaekley v. Dooley 38, 41 43 Blackmore \ . Bristol 34 Blacberg, Ex parte 52 Bloxam v. Sanders 38 Ebnd V. Brewer 77 Bother r. Buswell 78 Bowen PAGE Brown v. Hodges - ^' Brown, Ex parte — ^ Brown ats. White ^^ Brown v. BIrowu ^^ Btown V. Butchers' Bank "'' Browning, In re "" Bryans v. Nix : 19 Bryant v. White 68 Bryant v. Crosby 26 Itryant v. Wardell 30 Bumley \ . Tafts '^"^ Burnell v. Tupper l^--t. 1 -" Burdett v. Hunt 20 Burgess ats. Gunn 1'?. IS Burke v. Taylor 12(j Burnell v. Maxin ij" Burnett \ . Quarman '•'•'■'' Burton v. Bellhouse 1'^ Bush V. Fry 5, 39, 72 Butler, J., in 2 H. Bl 12 Byers v. Franklin Coal Co 13 C. Cabot Bank v. Russett 103 Cameron y. Hunter 127 Campbell v. Mersey Docks 19 Campbell v. Strangeway 21 Campbell Printing Press Co. v. Walker 58 Canadian Camera Co., In re -ol Can. Perm. v. Merchants Bank 132 Caplin V. Anderson 59 Carpenter r. Blot 47 Carr ats. Edwards 30 Carroll v. Beard 7, 8, 9, 37, 41. 62. 92. 94 Carscallen \ . Moodie ] 24. 126 Castle \. Playford 2 Caton 1 . Caton 70 Central Branch R. W. Co. v. Fritz 131 Chadwick v. Turner ■ 59 Chamberlain v. Smith 7 Chalmers on Sales 35 Chalmers, Ex parte 3g Chambers v. Davidson 9 Chase v. Tacoma Box Co 125 Cheeseman y. Exall 37 Chesney v. St. John j)3 Chicester v. Cobb 70 Chinry v. Viall -{y Ohitty, Jr., on Bills q9 i\ Choteau v. AVebster 103. 104: X INDEX OF CASES. PASE Churchill v. Hulbert .■ 115 City Bank v. Barrow 11, 44, 72 City of N. O. V. LeBaanc 13 Clark V. G. W. R 17 Clark. V. Sharpe 103 Clason V. Bailey 69 Cleaver v. CuUoden 127 Clement ats. Mowatt 22, 26 Coe V. Cassidy 5 Coggs V. Bernard 24, 25, 28, 33 Cohen v. Chandler ' 77 Cook V. Hall 84 Cole V. Berry 8 Cole V. Western Bank 11 Cole V. N. W. Bank 11, 45, 72 Coles V. aark 114 Cooper V. Willomatt 37 Copeiand v. Hamilton 34, 35 Cornell ats. Vincent 31 Correio v. Lynch . 14 Cory V. Thames Iron Works, etc., Co 35, 36 Cowan V. Fisher 50, 109 Cowan V. Mibowen 27 Cousiueau v. Williams Mfg. Co Ill Cowat V. Cowat 125 Cox V. Schack 3, 9 Cox V. Cameron 137 Craig V. Beardmore 4 Crane v. Price , 12 Orawcour, Ex parte 6, 7, 42 Crawcour v. Salter 42 Crawford v. Branch Bank 101 Crist V. Kleber 7 Crompton Loom Works v. Hoffman 34, 36 Crompton v. Pratt 37, 41 Crof oot V. Bennett , 19 Crosby ats. Bryant 26 Crowley v. Barry 101, 104 Cull V. Roberts 31, 34, 110 Cumming's v. Tooley 60 Currie v. Misa 61 Currier v.- Knapp 41, 116 Curtin v. Western Assee. Co 12 Cushman v. Irwell 48 D. Damase Lane et al. v. Boland Ill Davey v. Chamberlin 33 Davidson v. Chalmers 9 Davis V. Morgan 125 INDEX OF CASES. XI PAGE Day V. Bassett 41 De Courcey v. Collins ''+ Deshon v. Bigelow 42 Delaware R. W. Co. v. Oxford 13.S Deti-ich V. Ashdown 38 Dewar v. Mallory 1-^0 D'Eyncourt v. Gregory 130 Dickenson v. Dickenson ^** Dickson v. Hunter 1 2.^; Discher v. C. P. L. & S. Co Ill Dobree v. Eastwood 101 Dobson ats. Mitchell 21 Dodge V. Potter 90 Dominion Bank v. Davidson IS, 56 Dominion Bank v. Wiggins 49, (j8, 92, 93 Donald v. Suckling .31, 38 Dorau v. Willard 73, 129, 1.30 Douglass V. Douglass TS Downer v. Remer lO:', Drury v. Hervey 115 Dudley v. Hurst .- 1.33 Dunstan v. McAndrew 110 E. Barley v. Preston 101 Eastern Bank v. Btown 101, 104 Edmunds v. Wallingford '. . . 63 Edwards v. Reg 21 Edwards v. Carn 30 Edwards on Bailments : 33 Edwards v. English 59 Eilaud V. Radford 4 Eng. and Am. Enc. Law, Vol. 6 110 England v. Cowley 131 European and Australian R. M. Co. v. Royal M. S. Co. .37, 38, 108 Evans v. Mostyn 97 Everett v. Hall 37 Everest v. Hale 108 Ewell V. Daggs .5;-; Exchange v. Boyce 103 Ex parte Ashbury ^ 33 Ex parte Blaiberg 52 Ex parte BreuU 70 Ex parte Brown 93 Ex parte Chalmers gg Ex parte Crawcour (; - ^-^ .jo Ex parte Fourdrinier ,^i.> Ex parte Kahen o^ Ex parte Knightley oq Ex parte Leslie .jn Xn INDEX OF CASES. PAGE Ex parte JIatthews 94 Ex parte Powell 6, 42 Ex parte White '. 5 Ex parte Wills 94 F. Fairbanks \'. Phelps 41 Fairbanks v. Eureka Co 81 Farmers Bank v. Gurnett 103 Farmers Loan v. Hendrickson 59 Parmloe v. Bain 46 Feder v. Van Winkle ' 124 Penn v. Bittlestow SO Ferguson v. Thomas 114 Filiatrault v. Goldie 6, 22, 111 Finney v. Grice 73 Fitzgerald v. G. R. E '. 28 Fitzgerald y. Hunter 47 Fleschner v. Sumter 82 Fletcher v. Braddyll 101 Fopper V. Magone 14 Ford V. Kettle 68 Forlinger \ . McDonald 62 Forman v. Proctor 116 Forms — of rent agreement with privilege of purchase 140 of conditional sale of machinery, with statement by vendee of ownership of land 141 of hire or rent receipt with right of purchase 144 Another form with right of purchase 1-16 of rent agreement, without conditions of purchase where lessors assume for a cash consideration all risks from fire 148 of rent agreement, risk from fire to be borne by lessee 148 of rent agreement with conditions of purchase 149 of agreement to sell upon condition 150 Another form 151 of promissory note, the title to property retained in payee. . 1.5-i Another form 153, 354 of order for delivery and sale from one who agrees to sell same and no other 1 5.i of order for chattel with special warranty by vendor 156 of delivery order, with property retained in vendor 157 of affidavit of execution 161 of another form of delivery order 161 of warranty and agreement 162 of another form of delivery order 163 Another form of delivery order 164 Another form of delivery order 166 Another form of delivery order 168 INDKX OF CASES. XUl PAOE Poi-ms — Con tin ited. of receipt by bailee to accompany instruments IHt* of application by proposed purchase for information 170 of letter supplying information 1 TO of notice of sale 1 71 Another form of delivery order 172 Form used in Province of C^^ipbec 174 Form used in Maritime Provinces ITii Another form 178 Promissory note, etc ISO Another form of promissory note, etc j^il Conditional hire receipt 183 Guarantee to Accompany same !«"> of order for goods 18.1 Forrestal v. McDonald 2. 10, 44, 47 Forth V. Simpson !i;_i Fortman y. Coepper 126 Foster v. Ropes 3 Foster v. Smith 70, 8!) Fowler v. Fowler 129, 1.30 Frank v. Batten 54 , fiii Fraser v. Lazeer 3 fi Frazee > . Moffit 14 Freeman v. Cook ' 41 Frick < . Hilliard 10 Frye v. Milligan 35, .'1, 110 Fuentis v. Mantis 42, -i-i Fuller V. Paise .',S G. Gallant v. Mellett 3, Gardner v. Shaw 01 Gardiner v. Parker 126 (ieary v. Physic 70 George v. Surrey 6!) Gibson v. Jlichaels Bay 98 Gladstone \-. Padwick 18 Gleason v. Knapp 8. 39. 40, 112 Godard v. Gould 73 Godts V. Rose 19 Goldie V. Harper 7. 26. 31. 82, 49 (lOldie V. Hewson 123 Golin V. Dunbar 77 Gooding v. Riley -"iS. 73 Gooderham v. Denholm 124. 133 Gorham \ . Holden 112 Goswell v. Archer 71 Gou,gh \ . Wood 131 (iracie v. Argentius :Ci Graham v. Sangston 104 XIV INDEX OF CASES. PAGE Gvaham v. Somers 7fi, 88 Grant v. Armour 5, 32 Green v. Shipwortli 70 Greenham v. Child 80 Greei- v. Church . . . , 8 Greither v. Alexander *i3 •jrice v. Richardson -38 Griffin \ . McKenzie 62 Gj-oat V. Gile 19 Grove, In re 78 Gunn v. Burgess 17, 19 H. liassart y. Brampton 124, 125, 12'.:i. 130, 132, 133 Hall V. Collins Bay 19 Hall V. Hazlett 49, 130, 131 Hall Mfg. Co. V. Hazlett ' 49, i;!<>, 131 Hall V. Sampson 114 Hall V. Wright 33 Halter \-. Runder 131 Hamilton v. Harrison 84 Hamilton Mfg. Co. v. Knight 35 Hamilton :Mfg. Co. v. Northey Mfg. Co 3t) Hans V. .Johnston 118 Harkness v. Russell ti Harris v. Comm. Bank 18, 87 Harris i . Dustin 51, 109 Harrington \-. King 24, 38 Harrison v. Elwing 69 Harrison v. Harrison 79 Harrison y. Lee 4 Harvey v. Murray, 32 Harvey v. R. I. Loco. Works 7, 8 Hatchings v. Muuger 112 Hawkes a . Salter 102 Hawkins v. Root 101 Haywood > . Thacker 20 Heilbutt v. Hickson 2 Hellawell v. Eastwood 122, 131 Helby v. Matthews 5 7 y Helshaw v. Langley gg Hendcliffe v. Barwick gg Henry ,'. Tufts ....[..[.. 48 Hereford v. Davis 7 Hewitt ^ . Thompson 5^02 103 Heyman v. Hewker Y2 Haywood v. Potter -^ - Hiltinger v, Westford j4 Higgins V. Burton 4.1 Hobson V Gorringe -(29 igQ INDEX OF CASES. XV PAGE Hodgson V. Warner H Holland v. Hodgson 129, 130. l.''>2 HoUiday v. Counsel] IS Holman v. Doran , TT> Hooseley v. Garth 8.3 Hope v. Hope 77 Hopewell Mills v. Taunton 1S3 Hordman ^ . Booth 41 Hortraug'ht v. Wlegman 14 Housatonic and La Banks v. Martin 68 Howe Machine Co. v. Wilson 110 Howell V. Listowel Rink, etc 131 Hoyt V. Hoyt 82 Hubbard v. Bliss 108 Hubert v. Moreau 70 Hubert v. Treherne 69 Hughes V. Little 2 Jones on Bailments 27, 28 .Jones V. Lewis lO.S .Tones on Mortgages 3, 26, 37, 41, 60, 108, 130 Jones ^ . Henderson IS •Jones Y. Scottish Accident Ins. Co 81 .Jordan v. Money 44 .Joseph Hall Jlfg. Go. y. Hazlett 130, 131 J.iyce y. Booth 137 Jury V . Barker 93 K. ICauffman v. Ivlang ..,...• . 54 Keefer v. Merrill 126, 129, 130, 132 ICelley y. Powlett 73 Tvellog y. Secord 63 K:elner v. Baxter 71 Kelsey v. Rogers 13 Kent y. Buck 45 Kerr y. Lundley 7(j, 89 JCessey y. JIcHenry 60 Keyen ^ . Crawford 64 Ivimball y. Weldon 81 Ivimball Co. v. Millon 55 Kimberley -s . Patching 4 Iving > . Farewell 7S XVI IMDEX OF CASES. PAGE Kii-by V. Clapp 73 Kirchoffer v. Clement llo Kirkwood v. Smith 93 Knightly, Ex parte 80 Knox V. Payne 5 Kohyl V. Lynn 60 L. La Banque Hochelaga v. Waterous Ki, 22, 131 Laine v. Belard 130 Ijamond v. Pavell 5 Lamson v. Falls 89, 90 Lancaster v. Eye 73, 132 Langdon v. Bull 10 Langley v. Kahnert o, 8, 40 Laugher v. Pointer 33 Laveque v. Navarine 117 Lears v. Ag. Ins. Co 93 Leask v. Scott 61 Lee V. Butler .-). 8 Leithbridge S. Bank v. Exeter Macb. Works 125 Le Mesnager y. Hamilton 20 Leonard v. Boisvert 130 Leonard v. McLaughlin 108, 112 Leonard v. Willard '. 16, 127 Le Plante v. G. T. E 121 Liford's Case 133 Lloyd y. Ward ; 84 Loesdeman v. ilaclim ; 42 Logan V. Le Mesurier 19 London v. Emmons Ill Loudon Co. v. Drake 115 Longbottom v. Berry 1 23, 124 Lorecke \'. JIcKay ] H7 Loring v. Loring 45 Low V. Calvin TS Low V. Pettergill Tti, 89 Jl. MacCarthy v. Young 34 Jlacleau v. Dunn .■ 71 JIagee v. Catching 4 Manchester (Blank of) > . Slason 103 Mann i . Moors 103 JIauton V. Tabois 07 Markle v. Houck 1 1.>4 Marr v. Johnston 104 Martineau \ . Kitching 2 Marthnrson v, Patterson 97 INDEX OF CASES. XVU PAGE Mason v. Bickle ' 7, 42, 44, 45, 49 Mason v. Johnson 7, 8, 9j 41, 42 Mason v. Lindsay 2, 4, fi, 7, 8, 2(;, 32, 67, 76, 82, 86, 87 JXason V. Morgan 24 AXathers v. Lynch 22 Matthews, In re 42, '.14 May V. The Security L. & S. Co 18 Mears v. London and S. AV. R. t'o 24 fiercer v. Lancaster 1 Rex Contra, Attorney-Gen. v. Lorman 14 Rex V. Hipwell 53 Rex V. Wade OO Rex \ . Wheeler 12 Rex V. Woodhead 15 Reynolds \ . Case 77 Reynolds > . Roxburgh 2.'-: Rhodes y. Thw'ait 19 XX INDEX OF CASES. PAGE Rhymes v. Clarkson '0 Rigney v. Rigney '^^ River Stave Co. v. Sill '^'^ Robertson v. Strickland 40 Robinson v. McDonald 56 Rogers v. Devitt ^° Ross V. Hamilton '76, 89 Rothschild v. Commissioner Inland Rev 82 Runyon v. Mouutford 103 Ruttan v. Beamish 1^4 Saae v. Browning 58 Sagre v. Hevfes 59 Saint V. Pelley 115 Samuel v. Colter 114 Saunderson v. Jackson 69 Sargent v. Giles 7> 26 Sawyer v. Baskerville 110 Sawyer v. Pringle 3, 6, 9, 41, 50, 109, 113, 114 Sawyer y. Robertson 32 Sawyer v. SpafEord 4 Scarf V. Morgan 93 Schmidt v. 'Schmaetter 69 Schneider v. Norris 70 SchreifEer v. Wood 13 Scott V. Lord Ebury 71 Searle \'. Laverick 28 Seath y. Moore 3 Selby v. Selby 70 Seneca Bank v. Ness 103 Sharpe v. Crispin 78 Shaughnessy v. Lewis 75 Sheard v. Horan 42 Shebonneau v. Beaver l2T Shirbyan v. Albany 64 sShorman v. Broust 71 Silvey r. Lindsey 78 Simpson In re v. Co. J. of Lanark 69 Singer Co. v. Clark 108 Skibeck v. Garbett 102 S L. Sheldon Co. v. Myers 55 Smith v. Fair 113, 114, 116 Smith V. Wagoner 73 Snell V. Heighton 19 Sonde v. Morrow 82 Spaulding v. Barnes 1,16 Stadacona Fire & Life Inse. Co. v. Mackenzie 118 Staron v. Comp. des Moteurs au Gaz 22 Stale V. Castpol 52 INUt;X OF CASES. XXI PAGE Statutes — R. S. O. 1897, cap. 17 62 E. S. 0. 1897, cap. 125 64 R. S. O. 1897, cap. 148 1, 17, 40, 88, 96 R. S. O. 1897, cap. 149 31 R. S. O. 1897, cap. 150 72 R. S. O. 1897, cap. 152 44 51 Vict. cap. 19 5 62 Vic. cap. 7 31 6 Bdw. VII., cap. 19 86 . N. S. S.. cap. 28 58 Stephens > . Wilkinson 51 Stephenson v. Masson 78 Stevens v. Fisk 78 Stevens Man. Co. v. Barfoot 129, 130 Stevenson \ . Rice 7, 40, 42, 45, 48 Stewart v. Eden 103 Stockton V . Cullen 101 Stockwell V. Camplute 130 Stonebi-eaker v. Kerr 75 Story on Bailments 17, 25, 27, 29, 34 Story on Sales 6, 42, 58 Sturgeon ; . Korte 78 Sumner v. Cotley 8 Sutherland ^ . Mannix 39, 59 Sutherland v. Nixon 47 T. Talbot V. Sandilfer 4 Taylor v. Caldwell 33, 34 Taylor v. Crowland Gas Co 81 Taylor \ . Dobbins 69 Taylor v. St. Mary Abbott 79 Third >iational Bank v. Armstrong 49, 50, 93 Thomas ^ . Inglis , 129 Thompson v. Pettitt 19 Thorne v. Tilbury 37 Tidey v. Craib 63 Tiffany v. Warren 59 Tomlinson \-. Jlorris 34, 110 Tompkins v. Batie lOg Toms \ . Cuming (;'.» Town v. Griffith 8!) Towne v. Fisk 124 Tregambo v. Comandre Mill, etc., Co 91 True V. Collins 103 Trust and Loan Co. v. Ruttan 44 Tufts V. Poness 40 Turkey v. Bates 2 Tyler v. Strong 59 XXU INDEX OF CASES. U. PAGE U. S. V. Potts 13 U. S. V. Wilson 14 V. I Vaughan v. Newlove 29 Vincent v. Cornell 31 Vulcan Iron Co. v. Rapid City Co ; 46, 132. 136 W. Wadleigh y. Irwin 125 Wagner v. Cleveland 126 Wake V. Hall 124, 125, 127, 134, ISr, Walcot V. Botfield 79, 121, 151 Walker v. BCyman 8, 42. 47. 48 Walker v. Xnes 22 Walmsley v. ililne 12(; Walsh V. Taylor 11 -i Warner y. Jloir 79 Wii rwick \ . X oakes 101 Waterous Co. v. Henry 131 Waterons Engine Works Co. v. Pratt 110 Waterous v. Pratt i!i> Waterous \ . Wilson llTi Webster v. Overseers 18 Wells V. Jackson Iron Mfg. Co 20 Wellshear v. Cottrell 324 Western Hilling Co. v. Drake 39 Wettlaufer \-. Scott 49, i;>.">. 66 Wheeland v. Swartz 41 Wheeler >-. Montefiori 114 Wheelton v. Hardisty 4('> Whelan v. Couch - 117 White y. Browu 37 White \ . Gordon ; 47 White V. llorris 114 White ,. Smith 108. lis White V. Union Bank 89 Whithorn v. Thomas 79, S( I Whitney v. Shuboon . 7S Whymper r. Harney 14 Williams y. Leonard & Sons 61 Williamson v. Clementis 64 Wilson V. Auder.son 37 Wilson v. Shaver i; Wilton V. Girdlestone 43 Winn V. Snider (JO INDEX OF CA8ES. XXIU PAGE Wise V. Charlton 93 Wolfe V. Home 115 Works V. Hoffman 34 Woodcock A'. Houldsworth 101 Wright V. Redgrove 64 X. Xenos V. Wickham 33 T. Yardley v. Jones SO, 81 Young V. O'Reilly 118 ^'Better to safeguard covimercial tnorality it would be expedient to make provision for giving publicity hy registration to dealings such a.s this. The e^ect of the transaction {though it may not he contrary to law) is in protect the credit of a trader v)ho is yet heavily weighted with undisclosed oN /gallons. (Tiave suspicions must always arise in the minds of creditors whose claivis are super- seded by some instrument of peculiar character, produced at a perind of crisis, hy which all the assets of their debtor are secured to a near relatire." — Sir John Boyd, a, Banks V. Robinson, 15 0. R. 6S4. AN ACT RESPECTING CONDITIONAL SALES OF CHATTELS. REVISED STATUTES OF ONTARIO (1897), CHAP. 149. H ER MAJESTY, by and with the advice and consent of the Legis- lative Assembly of the Province of Ontario, enacts as follows :— 1. (1) Receipt notes, hire receipts, and orders (2) for chattels (3) given by (4) bailees (5) of chattels, where the condition (6) of. the bailment (7) is such that the possession of the chattel passes (8) without any ownership therein being acquired (9) by the bailee until the payment of the purchase or consideration money, or some stipulated part thereof, (10) shall only be valid as against (11) sub- sequent purchasers or mortgagees ' without notice in good faith (12) for valuable consideration (13) in the case of manufactured goods or chattels, (14) which, at the time (15) possession is given to the bailee, have the name (15o) and address of the manufacturer, bailor, or vendor of the same painted, printed, stamped or engraved thereon or otherwise plainly attached thereto, and no such bailment (16) shall be valid (17) as against such subsequent purchaser or mortgagee as aforesaid, (18) unless it is evidenced in writing, (19) signed (20) by the bailee or his agent. (21) (1) Possession of personal property in one person is quite consistent with actual ownership in another, and this statute, as well as the Act relating to Bills of , Sale and Chattel Mortgages, (a) are designed to protect the public against the mischievous consequences of apparent ownership in property, when the actual ownership is non- existing. There is, however, a plain and simple distinction (o) R. S. O. cap. 148. B.C. A. 1 2 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. between the two statutes. Both afford facilities for acquiring information, and both insist upon the adoption of a certain course as a means of protection, but the one statute (the present one) is pointed at cases wherein the possession changes and not the ownership, the other statute (6) at cases wherein the ownership changes and not the possession, and the principle of construction of this class of Acts is that however salutary thej' may be, inasmuch as they have the effect of taking away rights of property honestly acquired, they must be construed strictly (c). " Where the buyer is by the contract bound to do any- thing as a condition either precedent or concurrent, on which the passing of the property depends, the property will not pass until the condition be fulfilled, even though the goods may have been actually delivered into the possession of the buyer." (d) So far as the present statute is concerned, this general de- finition is sufficient, but there are many classes of condi- tional sales, in some of which the distinction between Con- ditional Sale Agreements and Chattel Mortgages is both nar- row and perplexing. For example, the ease of a sale of a chattel, when a right is reserved to the grantor or vendor to redeem or repurchase at a fixed price, within a stipulated time. In such instances, the best test is whether or not the relation- ship of debtor and creditor is terminated. If it is, and the grantor is entitled to repurchase, the transaction is a condi- tional sale ; if the debt still exists it is a mortgage. It there- fore will be seen that the intention of the parties is to be reached, (e) and this intention determines whether the sale is absolute or conditional, and is to be gathered from the terms of the contract and the circumstances of the case. A (6) R. S. O. cap. 148. (c) Brantovi v. Orifftts, L. R. 1 C. P. D. 356: Mason v. Lindsay, L. R. 4 Out. 3U5, (d) Benjamin on Sales, 270: Tiirley v. Bates (18(33), 2 H. & L. 200, 33 L. J. Exch. 43: HeilbuU v. Hichsoii (1872), _L. R. 7 C. P. 438: Maitiiieau v. Kitching (1872). L. R. 7 Q. B. 430: Castle v. Play- ford (1872), L. R. 7 Exch. 98. (e) Strong, J., Forrestal v. McDonald. 9 Can. S. C. R. at p. 16: Wilson V. Shaver, L. R. 3 Ont. 110. SECTION ONE. d conflict thus arises, which can only be settled by a considera- tion of the peculiar circumstances of each case, looking at the attending circumstances, and construing the terms of the written contract. The terms of the contract shall be applied to known usage, and the intention must be manifested at the time the bargain is made. (/) But the intention must be gathered from the whole transaction, and not from any particular feature of it. (g) The legal and ^ equitable rights of the parties must be determined as, at, and from the time the chattels are de- livered from vendor to vendee, and the latter gives or enters into the consideration, (h) The character of the transaction is fixed at its inception, and nothing short of a new agree- ment can alter the original nature of the contract; (i) and therefore when a lien note is signed some months after the sale and delivery of the chattel for which the note is given, the lien clause is held to be inoperative so far as the chattel is concerned. (;') Such a lien might be treated as a chattel mortgage, in which ease the lien would, of course, be subject to the Act relating to chattel mortgages, {j'^) When the in- tention is not clearly expressed in the written instrument, and this is not the whole contract of the parties, parol evidence is then admissible to shew what the oral agree- ment is, and, in all cases of doubt, the inclination of the Court" is ho construe the transacticm as a mort- gage, rather than as a conditional sale, on the ground that to do so must necessarily be less harmful than to do the reverse, (h). Or when the circumstances indicate that the parties intended an absolute sale, an absolute sale it mil be, notwithstanding it is agreed that the title to the chattel is to remain in the vendor until the performance of some con- (f) Foster v. Ropes, 111 Mass. 10. (g) Benjamin on Sales, 548 et neq.: Jones on Mortgages, § 258: Seath V. Moore (1886), 11 App. Cases 350. 370. (ft) Maclennan, J.A., Sawyer v. Pringle. 18 Ont. A. R. at p. 234. (t) Jones on Mortgages, 263. (/) Gallant v. Mellett, C. C. Kings County. P. E. I., 18 C. L. Times Occ. Notes 199. (f) Cox ». Schack. 22 Occ. N. 188, 14 Man. L. R. 174. (fc) Jones on Mortgages, § 258. 4 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. dition, (/) and the burthen of proof will rest upon the party alleging a sale to prove either an absolute sale or a sale upon a condition which has been performed, (to) The earlier Act (n) came into force on the first of January, 1889, includ- ing that day, and to the extent of sec. 10 of the present Act, this Act might be read into the earlier Act, for sec. 10 is de- clared to be retroactive and to apply to past as well as to future transactions. (2) Not any of the transactions denoted by these forms of instruments amount, technically speaking, to a conditional sale. The marginal reference in the statute leads to the supposition that all cases of conditional sales were in the con- templation of the Legislature, yet such cannot have been the real intention of our law-makers, because the transactions aimed at are those only wherein the title or ownership does not pass, but possession does, and that too under a contract of purchase, for if a bailee of an article has possession of it, as hirer at a certain rent, his possession is that of hirer and it matters not that the article eventujaJly becomes his, when ail his rentals are paid, (n^) In some instances of condi- tional sales both ownership and possession passes, the condi^ tion consisting in the right of re-purchase within a specified time without continuing or creating any liability on the part of the vendor, (o) Thus, for example, where a vendor in a bill of sale extinguishes his debt to the vendee by a bill of sale, but the privilege is accorded to the vendor of repurchas- ing within a given time, the transaction is a conditional sale; (p) and where the privilege of repurchase consists merely of a verbal agreement by the creditor to resell on the debtors fulfilling certain conditions, makes the transaction a (I) Craig -'. Beardmore, L. R. 7 Ont. 674: Talbot v. Saiidilfer, 27 S. Car. 624 : Kimberley v. Patching, 19 N. Y. 330 : Aultman v. Silha, 85 Wis. 359. (fli) Sawyer v. Spafford, 4 Cush. (Mass.) 598. ()i) 51 Vic. cap. 19, Ontario, s. 9. (n') Mason v. Lindsay, L. R. 4 Ont. 373. (o) Jones on Chattel Mortgages, § 26. (p) EUand v. Radford, 58 Ala. .'!7 : Harrison v. Lee, 1 Litt. (Ky.), 191:' Magee v. Catching, 83 Miss. 672. SECTION ONE. 5 conditional sale, (q) This kind of contract confers no title in the debtors, but creates an obligation on the part of the creditor, which may be enforced by an action to compel specific performance, or for the recovery of damages, (r) To no transactions of this nature does the Act apply, nor yet to sales to arrive, known to trade and commerce, which are conditional sales; nor to hire of goods under an agree- ment to return the same. (s). Nor to a transaction in which the bailee is not bound to purchase the chattel in his posses- sion, or in which he has merely the option to purchase, which option he has failed to exercise, (s^) The obligation to sell and the obligation to buy must be mutual, (s^) Nor again does the Act apply to a consignment of goods, when the sale is for the benefit of the consignor, for then the contract is one of agency simply; but such might become a conditional sale, when the goods are to be sold by the consignee on his own account, the owner reserving the title in them until the purchase money is paid, (t) Nor to a sale by sample, nor to a sale by description, nor to a sale on trial, nor to a sale to arrive, nor to a sale or return, nor to a transaction in which the possession changes but there is no sale, (u) Nor to a transaction amounting to a license on vendee's part to vendor to resume possession on default, (v) In truth the transaction aimed at by the statute is not, accurately speaking, a contract of sale. It could be more properly called a partial contract of sale. By the French law the condition is a "good suspensive condition," and one which entitles the vendor, if he tenders and offers to repay the portion of the price he has received, to judgment in an (g) Lamond v. Davall, 9 Q. B. 1030; Coe v. CassiAy, 6 Daly (N.Y.) 242: Pierce v. Scott 37 Ark. 308. (r) Knox v. Payne, 13 La. Am. 361. («) Grant v. Armour, 25 O. R. 7. («') Mason v. Lindsay, L. K. 4 Ont. 365. («") Eel1>y V. Matthews (1895), A. C. 471: Lee v. Butler (1893), 2 Q. B. 318. (t) Ex. p. White, L. R. 6 Ch. 39T : R&iioe v. Western Star Milling Co., 53 Kan. 255 ; Langley v. Kaihnert, L. R. 9 Ont. 164. («) Bush r. Fry, 15 Ont. R. 122: Mason v. Lindsay, L. R. 4 Ont. 365. (ti) Cameron, J., Poison v. DeGur, 12 Ont. R. at p. 280. 6 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. action of revendication. (v^). It is probably an executory agreement for a future sale on the performance of a certain condition by the vendee, the condition under the statute being the payment of the purchase or considera- tion money, or some stipulated part thereof, (w). Yet again an executory agreement, to be technically accurate, is scarcely the definition. An executory contract is absolutely to sell at a future time, and a conditional contract is conditionally to sell. In the one case, the performance of the contract is suspended and transferred to a future time, in the other case the very existence and performance of the contract depend upon a contingency, (x). Another distinction some- times shewn is that in the case of a conditional sale, the mterest of the vendee is exigible under execution, while in the ease of an executory conditional agreement for the pur- chase of property it is not exigible, nor can it be transferred to iona fide purchasers as in the case of conditional sales, (y) The section does not apply unless the instrument is one by which the person into whose possession the chattel passes agrees to become the purchaser of it, but the ownership of it is not to be acquired by him until he has paid the purchase or consideration money, or some stipulated part of it : — in other words, unless he has bought or agreed to buy the chattel." (2/I) Transactions of the character intended by the terms, " receipt notes," " hire receipts," and " order for chattels,'' are extremely common, and are becoming more and more so with the extension of trade and commerce. While condi- tional sales as between the immediate parties can be made by word of mouth, coupled with delivery, yet under the statute, such must be evidenced in writing, that is as against (»M FiUatrauU v. Goldie, Q. R. 2 Q. B. 368. (w) Harkness v. ■Russell, 118 U. S. 663 : Sawyer v. Pringle. 18 Ont. A. R. 218 : Bx parte Crawcour. 9 Ch. D. 419 C. A. : Ex parte Powell 1 Ch. D. 504 C. A. (x) Story on Sales, § 24U. (j/) 6 Am. & Eng. Encyl. of Law 449. (y^) See section 2 in which the sale " is given to secure the pur- chase money or a part thereof." SECTION ONE. 7 subsequent purchasers and mortgagees. As to all others, it matters not whether it be in writing or by word of mouth, and the law then applicable to the transac- tion is as if the statute had never been passed. The case and simplicity with which the vendor of a chattel can, in a summary manner, resume possession and thereby extin- guish the interest of the vendee, as well as the rights which he had in the chattel, as also- the circumstances of secrecy in transactions of the kind, have naturally led to the adop- tion of this form of conditional sale in preference to any other method, less secret and more risky to the party selling. The agreement (z) sometimes provides for the payment of a rental, or some sum for the use of the article, which may be applied pro tanto, on the purchase money if and when finally paid, (a) But whatever the form of the transaction is the Legislature has said that in such a contract the vendee is not a mere hirer of the property, with a right afterwards to become a purchaser, but is the present equitable owner of it, subject to the payment of the purchase money. (6) Often- times the monthly rentals are in reality simply instalments t)f the purchase money, and the hardship upon the vendee of a forfeiture when several of the instalments have been paid, have, in two instances, led to construing the transaction as one of sale with reservation to the vendor of a secret lien, (c) Our courts, however, have always enforced these contracts according to their plain terms, (d) not only as between the («) For Forms, see Appendix, (o) Re Rolertson, 9 Ch. D. 419. (6) Goldie d McCulloch v. Harper, 31 Ont. R. at p. 288: see Hally \-. Matthevcs (1895), A. C. 471: Mason v. Lindsay, supra. (c) Harvey y. R. I. Locomotive Works, 93 U. S. 604 : Hereford v. Davis, 102 U. S. 235. (d) Stevenson v. Rice. 24 TJ. C. C. P. 245: Carroll v. Beard. 27 Ont. R. 349: XoMheinier v. Rohimon, 2 A. R. 305 : Walker v. Hyman, 1 A. R. 345 ; Mason v. Johnson, 27 C. P. 208 : Mason v. Bickle. 2 A. R. 291 : ex parte Crawcour, in re Robertson, L. R. 9. Ch. D. 419 : Ogg V. Shuter, L. R. 10, C. P. 159. See also Ghamlerlin. v. ismith, 44 Penna. St. 431: Crist v. Kleler, 79 Id. 290: Sargent \. Uilcs. 8 N. H. .325: Bean v. Edge, 84 N. T. 510. a CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. immediate parties, but as against bona fide purchasers, for value without notice, (e) In all the transactions, however, the true test, after all, is the element of purchase, and the provision for payment, (f ) If the latter is sought to be disguised under the device of a lease, and the payments are denominated as rent, the courts will still construe the transaction as a conditional sale, not- withstanding the use of terms inappropriate to such a con- tract, (g). In the case of a sale of chattels when the vendor retains a vendor's lien for the unpaid purchase money, and no actual delivery is to be made and possession is retained until the full amount of the purchase is paid, then the provision that the vendor will, on payment of the balance of the purchase money, effectually transfer the chattel, manifests the inten- tion to transfer the title (which until then is in the vendor) and makes the sale a conditional sale, (h) but such a sale may not be within the Act, because possession of the chattel does not pass vmtil payment in full, (■i) and it is to be pre- sumed that the time when possession is contemplated to pass in transactions within the Act, is at the inception of the bailment, or, at all events, at a period before the complete ownership has passed from the vendor to the vendee. This is the case notwithstanding express mention of the vendor's lien. ■" Lien is not the result of an express contract, ii is given by implication of law. If, therefore, a mercantile relation, which might involve a lien, is created by a written (e) Walker v. Hyman, 1 A. R. 345. See also Ballard v. Burgett, 40 N. Y. 314: Sumner v. Gotley, 71 Mo. 121, 125: Bradshaw v. Warner, 54 Ind. 58, 62 : Hodgson v. Warner, 60 Ind. 214 : Cole v. Berry, 42 N. J. L. 308, 313: Langley v. Kahnert, L. R. 9 Out. 164. if) Belly V. Matthews, (1895) A. C. 471: Hull Roves Go. v. Adams, (1895) Bo L. J. Q. B. 114: Lee v. Butler, (1893) 2 Q. B. 318 : Mason v. Lindsay, supra. {g) Mason v. Johnson, 27 U. C. C. P. 208: MoGinnis v. Savage. 29 W. Va. 362: Harvey v. Rhode Island L. Works, 93 U. S. 664: Greer v. Churoh, 13 Bush (Ky.) 430. (h) See Carrall v. Beard, 27 Ont. R. at p. 352. (i) Gleason v. Knapp, 26 C. V. 353. SECTION ONE. if contract, and security given for the result of the dealings in that relation, the express stipulation and agreement of the parties for security exclude lien, and limits their rights by the extent of the express contract that they have made." (;') Hence when the contract is one of conditional sale the express mention that the vendor retains a lien upon the chattel goes for nothing, (h) The words as to the vendor's lien must be treated as inappropriate surplusage, and read out of the terms, because one cannot have a lien on his o'mi property, and because the right of lien, legally speaking, arises from operation of law and not from the expression of the parties. (1) One of the essentials of a lien is that it has reference to the property of another, and not to the property of the person claiming the lien, and, as in the case put, the contract making the right of property and the right of pos- session unite in the vendor, there cannot be a lien, and hence a provision for its retention is manifestly unnecessary. Nor, in a ease of this kind, is it right to look at the subsequent acts of the parties in regard to the property to determine the legal effect of the contract of sale, (m) The rights of the vendee depend upon the construction of the written agreement on the day it bears date, (n) Hence a delivery of possession of the chattel subsequently is not evi- dence of an intention to pass the property in it to the vendee, (o) and once the title has passed to the vendee on an absolute sale, of course it is too late then to seek to change the char- acter of the transaction into one of conditional sale wherein only possession and not title passes, and any attempted com- pliance with this Act or its companion Act relating to Bills of Sale and Chattel Mortgages will avail nothing, (p) (;■) Lord Chancellor Westbury in Chamiers v. Davidson, L. R. 1 P. at p. 305. (k) Carrall v. Beard, supra. (?) See Carrall v. Beard, 27 O. R. at p. 358, Boyd. C. (m) Rose, J., Beard v. Carroll, 27 Ont. R. at p. 361. yn) Sawyer v. Pringle, 18 Ont. A. R. at p. (o) Carroll r. Beard, 27 O. R. 849: Mason v. Johnson, supra. (p) Oallant v. Mallet, 18 C. L. T. 199: Cox v. Sohack. 14 Man. L R. 174. 10 CONDITIONAL SALES AHT. Where a note is given for the purchase money of a chattel, and it is provided that the note should be a lien upon the chattel for which it was given until it is paid in full at ma- turity, and until then the property should be at the disposal of the vendor, the transaction was held to be a mortgage and not a conditional sale, the reservation of the lien being inconsistent with the retention of the title by the vendor, (q) Xor, again, does it follow that because possession passes of a chattel, the statute necessarily applies, for the possession may not be that of a vendee. For instance, there might be a consignment of crude oii to a refiner on the express under- standing that no property in the oil shall pass until the re- finer has made certain payments. The refiner in such ease cannot sell the oil, and if he does so to one who even has no knowledge of the facts, the consignor may recover from the purchaser the price of the oil. (r) In such a transaction there has been no sale, hence the consignee could not sell. " At common law a person in possession of goods could not confer on another, either by sale or by pledge, any better title to the goods than he himself had. To this general rule there was an exception of sales in market overt, and an apparent exception where the person in possession had a title defeasible on account of fraud. But the general rule was that to make either a sale or pledge valid against the owner of the goods sold or pledged, it must be shewn that the seller or pledger had authority from the owner to sell or pledge, as the case might be. If the owner of the goods had so acted as to clothe the seller or pledger with apparent authority to sell or pledge, he wa§ at common law precluded as against those who were induced iona fide to act on the' faith of that ap- parent authority, and the result as to them was the same as if he had really given it." (s) (g) Prick v. HilUard, 95 N. Oar. 117: Langdon v. BaU, 9 Wend. (N. T.) 80. (r) Forristal v. McDonald, 9 Can. S. O. R. 12 : City Bank v. Bar- roic, 5 App. Cases 664. (.s) Per L. .T. Blackburn in Cole v. N. Western Bank, Xi R. 10 C. P. 354. SECTION ONE. 11 ^'or does the possession given to an agent under the Fac- tors Act. (t) for under that Act the agent's possession makes him the owner to sell to another the goods with which he is entrusted as the factor or agent, (u) Now, however, a contract (v) within the statute will be void as against a purchaser unless the statute is complied with. As has been said, our courts have always enforced these contracts according to their plain terms, not only as between the immediate parties, but as against bona fide purchasers for value without notice. (3) The term "chattels" in this section applies to manu- factured (cc) goods and chattels of all kinds, except house- hold furniture, (y) but inasmuch as, for the purposes of this Act, pianos, organs, or other musical instruments are not within the definition of household furniture, (z) it follows that chattels of the latter description come under the opera- tion of the Act. The derivation of the word " manufacture " gives to its meaning a far too limited one. Simply making with the hand does not by any means comprehend all that is covered by manufactured goods. " All artificial products of human industry, nearly all such materials as have acquired changed conditions or new and specific combinations, whether from the direct action of the human hand, from chemical processes devised and directed by human skill, or by the employment of (t) R. S. O. cap. 150. (m) Johnson v. Credit Lyonnais Co.'y, C. P. 93: Cole v. 'N. W. Bank, 3 O. P. Div. 32. (») For Forms see Appendix. (x) What are manufactured goods? The meaning of the word " manufacture " is " to form by manufacture or workmanship, by the hand or by machinery, or manual dexterity ; to make by art and labor." — Worcester. Prom manu by the hand, and facio to make. And Webster says the definition is " To make or fabricate from raw materials by the hand, by art or machinery, and work into forms convenient for use." And Abbott gives its meaning as " Whatever is made by human labor either directly or through the instrumentality of machinery." Atty.-Gen'l v. Lorman, 59 Mich. 163, 164. (y) See section 2 post. («) Section 2 post. 12 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. machinery, which, after all is but a higher form of the simple implements with which the human hand fashioned its crea- tions in ruder ages, are now commonly designated as ' manu- factured.' " (a) Making a thing by art, as well as by hand, is to manufacture, (&) Making a thing by machinery is, in fact, making it by hand, and any article thus made into a new form capable of being used, and designed to be used in ordinary life is a manufactured article. 'Anything made, which is useful, and is vendible in the shape sold, such as medicine, (c) is a manu- factured article, (d) but a medicine would scarcely be within the Act, because for one reason it would not admit of the name of the vendor being plainly painted or engraved upon it, and, of course, these words (e) define the character or kind of manufactured article that is within the Act. Should the article, even though, in the wider sense it be a manufactured article, be one upon which it would be physically impossible to place the name in accordance with the requirements of the Act, then it would be an article in regard to which the statute does not apply. A stove, a telescope, an engine, or instrument, or part of an engine, or part of an instrument to be employed in the making of some previously known article, or in some other useful purpose, as a stocking frame or a steam engine for raising water from mines, are manufactured articles and within the Act. (f) Beer is said to be a manufacture, be- cause it is made from malt and other ingredients, and whiskey is a manufacture from corn and cider from apples, {g) but, as in the case of medicine, these things can scarcely be said to fall within the Act, (a) Cartin v. Western Ass. Co. (Toronto), 57 M'd. 526. (6) Butler, J., in 2 H. Bl. 463, 471. (c) Murphy v. Anson, 96 U. S. 134. (d) Rex V. Wheeler, 2 B. & Aid. 349. (e) See note 15, 15a and 16 post. if) Rex V. Wheeler, supra. (g) Murphy v. Anson, supra: Crane v. Price, 4 Man. & G. 580: Boulton and Watt v. Bull. 2- Hea. Black 463 : Fess Pat. 67. StiCTION ONE. 13 A manufactured article is not a something created out of nothing, nor indeed does it consist exclusively in a new article out of and from the raw material. Under the Act it will consist almost altogether in something into which a new shape, a new condition, or a new combination is given, which before then had already gone through some artificial process: a bureau, for instance, is a manufactured article though it consists in and combines other parts previously manufactured, such as the locks, the knobs, the screws, and the lumber pre- viously worked up from the raw material; and a locomotive, also, notwithstanding that its constituent parts were pur- chased from other manufacturers. Therefore, the cabinet- maker and the locomotive builder, each is a manufacturer within the Act upon whom the statutory duties rest, even though he may not be the manufacturer of the constituent parts of the article he sells. (A) ^Mineral and ore are not manufactured articles, because nothing is put into the raw substance as it comes from the earth, to change its natural condition. Therefore, coal is not a manufactured substance, (t) But " animal charcoal " produced by the burning of bone, and " bone dust " produced by pulverizing it are manu- factured articles, {j) When saleable articles are produced from wood, even though the producing process is the simple act of sawing or splitting, the product is a manufactured article, {h) Coral is not a manufactured article, but when cut into the shape or form of a cameo it becomes manufac- tured. {I) And so one wonders why copper plates turned up at the edges should not also be considered manufactured arti- cles, but it seems they are not such, (m) Cotton is not a manufactured article; but the weaving of it into covering of (ft) iNorris Bros. v. Com., 27 Pa. St. 496: City of N. 0. v. Le Blanc, 34 La. An. 597 : Morgan v. Seaward, 6 L. J. Ex. 156, 2 M. & W. 558. (i) Byers v. Franklin Coal Co., 106 Mass. 131. (;■) Schriefer v. Wood. 5 Blatchf (U. S.) 216. (fc) Kelsey v. Rogers, 32 U. C. C. P. 624: Foppes v. Magone, 40 Fed. Rep. 570: U. S. v. Hathaway, 4 Wall. (U. S.) 404, 408). (I) Bailey v. Schell, 5 Blatchf. (U. S.) 195. ~(m) V. S. V. Potts, 5 Cranoh (II. S.) 284. 14 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. strips of steel to be used for making crinoline skirts, makes it so. (n) Firewood is not a manufactured article, (o). But illuminating gas is. (p) Spectacles are manufactured, (q) Straw is not, but straw plait is. (r) Hay is not, nor is cot- ton, nor is wheat, nor is sugar, nor is salt, nor are apples when dried, because the process these articles are subject to is manipulation rather than manufacture, and the substance of each is still its same original substance, (s) For the same reason ice, that is natural ice, is not a manufactured article, (t) But ice produced by frigorific effect may pro- perly be said to be manufactured, (u) As ice cut into blocks is not a manufactured article, neither, it has been held, is marble which has been cut into blocks, (v) Neither is white lead, nor nitrate of lead, nor oxide of zinc, nor dry and orange mineral, a manufactured article, because in these forms the metal or mineral has not lost its distinctive form. (w). Strip- ping the bark from elm does not make the log when stripped a manufactured article, but if the log is then hewn or squared the act of squaring that which was round makes it so. (a;) So shells are not manufactured articles, because cleaned and etched by acid, (y) In many of the foregoing instances it must be remembered that the character of the article depends perhaps upon the particular statute having reference to it, when its character has to be defined. In some cases, for instance, the article ill) WJiifiiipcr V. Hartley. 18 C. B. N. S. 243. (o) Correio v. Lynch. 65 Cal. 273. (p) Nassau Gas Light Co. v. :rooklyn, 89 N. Y. 409. (g) Artner v. Sussfield, 96 U. S. 128. (r) Beadon v. Parratt, L. R. 6 Q. B. 718. (s) Frazee v. Maflit, 20 Blatchf. (U. S.) 267. (t) Hiltinger v. Westford, 135 Mass. 262: Rex contra, Atty.- (ien. V. Lorman, 6 Am. Rep. 287. (u) People V. Eniclceriocker Ice Co., 99 N. Y. 181. {v) U. 8. V. Wilson, cited in Hortrauft v. Wiegmann, 121 U S i;i.i. {■w) Meyer v. Arthur, 91 U. S. 570: see also Murphy v. Anson, supra. (x) Foppes V. Magone. 40 Fod. Rep. 570. (1/) Hortrauft \. Wiegmann, 121 U. S. 669. SECTION ONE. 15 gets its definition from customs laws or excise laws. In general, it may be said, having regard to this particular sec- tion, that manufactured goods means such goods the manu- facture of which is completed, so that the goods are in a condition to be sold, with nothing left to be done, when they are bought, than to deliver them to the purchaser. If such goods are not brought into a condition fit for sale, if some- thing has still to be done, then the goods are jet in the pro- gress of manufacture, and are not manufactured articles, even though the component parts may be finished and com- plete. But if the sale is of one of the component parts then as to that part, if it is completely finished the Act may apply, for by itself it is a manufactured article. (2). In consequence, however, of the Statute Law Amend- ment Act, (6 Edw. YII. cap. 19 sec. 23), widening the scope of this statute, so as to make it cover all chattels (see post section 2a) the question, whether a chattel is manufactured or not, ceases to be of any importance except that on a manufactured article, exclusi\-e of furniture, the vendor may comply with the Act by painting, &c., his name upon the article sold. This amendment, however, does not come into force until 1st Januar}^, 1907. Chattels may be moveable or immoveable, and are divided into the two classes, real and personal, (a). Real and per- sonal property may be the subject of a conditional sale, but as chattels real are iiot contemplated by the statute, (&) all reference thereto may be excluded. Chattels personal have been defined as those things which belong immediately to the person of the owner, and for which, if they are injuriously withheld from him, the owner has no other remedy than by a personal action, (c) There- fore, chattels personal are divisible into two classes. First, — They consist, in part, of things which exist only (z)Rex V. Woodhead, 1 Moodv R. 549: Hey wood v. Potter, 1 El. & Bl. 439. (a) Whart. Law Lex. (7;) Frazer v. Lazier, 9 U. O. Q. B. 079. (f) Whart. Xjav.' i.ei 16 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. in contemplation of law; things of which a person has not the possession, or actual enjoyment, but only a right to, or a right to demand by action; as, for instance, a right to recover money due on a contract — a chose in action. Second, — They consist of moveable things only as belong- ing immediately to the person, and which can only be de- livered over from hand to hand, such (e.g.) as books, wares, and merchandise, (d) It may be concluded that the present statute applies only to chattels within the latter definition. Though it may here be added there may be a conditional sale of a thing incorporeal in its nature, as for example, the good-will of a newspaper establishment, (e) Then, the Act applies to manufactured articles destined from their very character to be immoveable, that is, in the sense of being immobilized by being constructed into a building. But to give moveable property the character of immoveables by de- stination, it is necessary that the person incorporating the moveable with the immoveable, should be, at the time, owner both of the moveables and of the real property with which the moveable is incorporated. (/) Immoveables by nature are not within the Act, and to ascertain the point of differencd between immoveables by destination and immoveables by na- ture the test is, have the fixtures when detached from the realty an independent existence as moveables ? If they have, then they are chattels, if not they are part of the realty, (g) Possession, in the language of the statute, can pass from and be given by one to another without manual delivery. As opposed to an actual change of possession, there can be a con- structive change of possession, the possession of the chattel passing in the one case as well as in the other, but the use of the word "bailment," (h) upon which the entire clause hinges, suggests beyond question an application of the statute (d) Whart. Law Lex. : Herman on Mortgages 3. (e) Boon V. Moss, 70 N. Y. 465. (f) La Banque d'Hochelaga ct Waterous Engine Works Co., 27 S. C. R. 407 : Leonard v. Willard, Q. R. 23 S. C. 482, (g) Strong, C.J., idem p. 415 (ft) Prom "bailer," Pr., to deliver. SECTION ONE. 17 onty to chattels susceptible of full and complete delivery, (t) In fact, to property of which there may be a present posses- sion or title, or in which there is a present vested right or interest, and not to property which may be acquired in futuro. (j) There must then be a delivery, and there must also be a change of possession, differing perhaps from the definition of the term " chattel " under the Act respecting mortgages and sales of personal property, {k) only in that under the latter statute the " delivery " must be " immediate " and the possession must be " an actual and continued change of pos- session." The object of the statute is to safe-guard the public, by af- fording one an opportunity of knowing whether or not his fellow-man is really the owner of property the possession of which leads to such belief, and to prevent a fictitious com- mercial standing being enjoyed by one who may be " heavily weighted" with obligation, (l) Though this be the laud- able object of the statute, parties to a transaction cannot be prejudiced by non-compliance with the Act if the transac- tion be one to which the statute does not apply; as, for in- stance, where, from the circumstances of the case, possession in the chattel cannot be passed consistently with the object of the agreement in regard thereto; (m) or where a condi- tional sale is made of a half interest in a threshing machine, or other manufactured property, (n) because the vendee in such case does " not acquire " a specific chattel but only a conditional interest in an undivided moiety of an indivisible piece of personal property, (o) Bailment or actual delivery, cannot be made of such an undivided moiety, hence the char- acter of the person acquiring such is not that of a bailee (;■) Story on Bailments, § 294. (J) See Clark v. G. W. R., 8 O. P. 191. (k) R. S. O. cap. 148. (Z) Boyd, C. Banks v. Robinson. 15 O. R. at p. 624. (m) Burton v. Bellhouse, 20 TJ. C. Q. B. 60. (n) Gunn v. Burgess, 5 O. R. 685. (o) Gunn v. Burgess, supra. B.C.A. — 2 18 CONDITIONAL SALKS ACT. within the Act. As the mischief intended to be remedied by the Bills of Sale and Chattel Mortgage Act (p) is to pre- vent a secret transfer of moveable property which can be at once removed, and the apparent ownership of which is suf- fered to remain in a person who has parted with the owner- ship, (g) so, the mischief to be remedied by this Act is to prevent a secret transfer of moveable property, which can be at once removed, and the fictitious standing by the apparent ownership which is in him by possession when the real ownership is in another. This pos- session must be the sole and exclusive possession, and this is impossible in the case of an undivided interest in a chattel, because the possession of one is the possession of both, the physical possession of one with the assent of the other being constructively the actual possession of both, (r) Nor would the Act apply to a transfer of manufactured goods, the ownership thereof remaining in the transferor, when the goods are in the hands of a warehouseman, who be- comes the agent of, and agrees to hold them for, the trans- feree, (s) and therefore the Act does not apply to a con- ditional sale of goods in customs, subject to duties, for they are not capable of bailment, at least until the duties had been settled, (t) Neither, when this statute is not complied with, can it be invoked, to defeat the claim of a transferor, who retains in himself the ownership of a chattel which, when it passes into the possession of the transferee, does so charged with, or subject to, the title of a third party, (u) When it is not a condition that possession of the chattel shall pass, and possession does not pass, then the Act does not apply, (p) R. S. O. cap. 148. (g) Per Cockburn, J., in Brantom, v. Origits, L. R. 1 C. P. D. 349 : Barton, J., in MoMaster v. Oarland, 8 Ont. A. R. 12. (r) Holliday v. Gounsell, 1 T. R. 658: Brown v, Hodges, 1 Salk. 290: Webster v. Overseers, L. R. S C. P. 306: Gladstone v Padwick L. R. 6 Ex. 204. (s) Jones V. Henderson. 3 Man. L. R. 433. (t) May V. The Security L. & S. Company, 45 U. C. R. 106: Harris i-. Com. Banl;, 26 I'. C. Q. .B 437. («) Dominion Bank \. Davidson. 12 A. R. 93. SECTION ONE. 19 for it is of the essence of a contract of bailment that there be an actual delivery of the chattel to the bailee. It is plain then that the maxim " Cujus est dare, ejus est disponere " is given a much restricted application by the statute, which is now intended to apply to all chattels, susceptible of specific ascertainment, and of being ac- tually and manually transferred and po'fesessed in specie, (v) The statute applies only to chattels wherein the right of pro- perty can be transferred, and the right of property can only be transferred in a chattel, when the chattel is ascertained and identified at the time of the transfer, (w) Thus no right of property passes in a grant of twenty wagons to be taken out of a factory containing a much greater number, but when once the selection or appropriation is made of the particular twenty wagons the property in them passes, and not until then is the statute given an application. Until such time arrives the transaction partakes of the nature of an executory contract not contemplated by the statute (x) (4) The word "given" is to be observed in this section. In the connection in which the word is used it is equivalent to the term "executed." The latter word consists of three distinct acts, "signing, sealing, and delivery," and the last of these three acts is not complete without " acceptance." Sealing is not necessary in any instrument executed under this Act, (y) and for that reason the addition of a seal will not vitiate the instrument. («) Signing and delivery are essential, and both are necessary to create a "giving" in accordance with the Act, and de- (v) See Ounn v. Burgess, 5 O. R. 685: Lee \. C'uli], L. R. S Oat. 21(1. (w) Snell V. Reighton, 1 C. & E. 95. (x) Lee V. t'ulp, supra: Ross v. Rarteau, 18 C. S. R. 713: MiraMta v. Imp. Ottoman Bank, 3 Ex. D. 164, 172 : Crofoot v. Bennett, 2 Comstock (N.T.) 258: Groat v. ail'e. 51 X. Y. i31 : McDougall v. Elliott, 20 U. C. R. 299: Bryans v. W»>, 4 M. & W. 774 : Oodts v. Rose. 17 C. B. 229 : Logan v. Le Mesurier. 6 Moore I'. C. 116 : Gamplell v. Mersey Docks. 14 C. B. N. S. 412 : Rluides \. Thwaites, 6 B. & C. 388: Aldridge v. Johnston, 7 E. & B. 885 ■ Atkinson v. Bell, 8 B. & C. 277. (;/) See Paterson v. Mnughan. S9 U. C. R. 379: Rail v. Collins Bay Co.. 12 App. R. 65: Thornp.son v. Pettitt. 10 Q. B, 101. («) idlton V. Moxlier. 7 IMet. 244. 20 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. livery, which is essential, is not a complete delivery without acceptance. The giving means, ifi fact, a completing of the documents referred to in the statute in ac- cordance with the various formalities required by law. Sealing is not one of these formalities, nor, in fact, is attes- tation. I venture to say that "' giving," as it appears here, has a wider significance than the term " execution," for, though in a general sense the latter term includes " delivery," yet it is so frequently used in the limited sense of " signing " that it has come to be used in this narrower sense, (a) and a document can scarcely be said to be " given " unless it is delivered. When it is delivered then it passes into the pos- session of the person for whom, or for whose benefit, it was made, but this possession is nothing more than prima facie evidence of delivery, and, as the statute (section 2) imposes ihe duty on the bailor or vendor of tiling the document, the fact of filing it, cannot be any better proof of delivery. (6) To the words "' given by " is to be ascribed the same de- finition as possessed by the term " executed by." Therefore until an instrument under the Act is delivered it has no eflB- cacy whatsoever. It is from delivery — the last act of execu- tion — that the instrument takes effect, and it is from the time of delivery that the period begins to run within which the copy of an instrument under the Act must be filed, (c) should the alternative not be observed, of painting, printing, stamp- ing or engraving the name of the manufacturer upon the chattel, delivered to the bailee or vendee. The date of the instrument is usually evidence of the time when it is given, (d) but as there may be a false, or impos- sible, or no date at all, such evidence is only presumptive, and it is still open to the parties to shew that the instrument was given at a time different to that shewn by the date, (e) (o) Le Mesnager v. Hamilton. 101 Cal. 532: 40 Am. St. Rep. 81. (6) Wells v. Jackson Iron Mfg. Co., 48 N. H. 537. (c) See section 2 post. (d) Hayword v. Thaclccr. 31 Q. B. 427. (e) See McLean v. Pinlcerton. 7 App. R. 490: Burdett v. Hunt, 25 Me. 419 : Partridge v. Siruze,/, 46 Me. 414. SECTION ONE. 21 Though the date of the instrument be the correct date, it affords no indication as to the time of the day when the in- strument was giTen. The rule formerly was, that as a gen- eral rule courts refused to take notice of a fraction of a day, because of the almost certain uncertainty of such a course; and " uncertainty is always the mother of confusion and con- tention." But in fixing the time, as regards the acts of parties, even though the acts are judicial in form, the courts will consider fractions of a day whenever necessary to de- cide which of two events first happened. (/) Should a bailor have to depend upon a compliance with the Act as to filiag a copy of the iustrument in order to sustain his right to a manufactured chattel as against a subsequent purchaser or mortgagee, it might be required of him to establish the time of day when the instrument was given, because when the justice of the cause so requires the courts will consider a fraction of a day. (g) It is therefore suggested that a bailor or vendor preserve indisputable evidence as to the hour of the day when execution of an instrument takes place. (5) Literally a bailee is one to whom goods are intrusted for a specific purpose, (h) One to whom goods are delivered in trust, upon a contract express or implied, that the trust shall be faithfully executed on his part. As for example: If cloth be delivered to a tailor to make a suit of clothes, he has the cloth upon the implied contract to render it again when made, and that in a workmanly manner, (t) The tailor is a bailee. If money or goods be delivered to a com- mon carrier, to convey from place to place, he is under con- tract to carry them as instructed. (;') The carrier is a bailee. (Jc) U) Gamphell v. >Strangeu-aij. 3 C. P. D. 107 : per Cur. in Edwards V. Beg., 9 Ex. 628: MeMartin v. McDougall. 10 U. C. Q. B. 399: see 2 Cowp. 720, 9 Dowl. 828. (g) Bechmun v. Jarvis. 3 U. C. Q. B. 280: but see Mitchell v. Dooson, 3 L. J. 185, wherein it is decided that in determining the application of a statute, a fraction of a day is not to be considered. (h) Whart. Law Lex. (i) 1 Vem. 268, Blackstone 11, 451. (;") 12 Mod. 482. (k) See more fully note (8) post, under bailment. 22 CONDITIONAL SALKS ACT. (6) The statute defines the condition of the bailment as being simply that the ownership in a chattel shall not be acquired until payment of the purchase money in whole or in part. When such are the conditions in a transfer of a chattel, then upon such a transaction the statute operates and takes effect, and the requirements of the statute must be complied with, otherwise the interest of the bailor, vendor or manufacturer may be defeated as against a sub- sequent purchaser or mortgagee in good faith without notice for valuable consideration. According to English law a contract of sale may be modified in any way the parties agree, as, for instance, by suspending the operation of the general effect of the contract in respect of the vesting of the property in the vendee, and providing that it shall not pass until the price is fully paid. It cannot be pretended that there is anything illegal in such a condition, which seems to be the French law and the law of the Province of Quebec, where the condition is correctly defined as a good suspen- sive condition. (I) But when such are not the conditions in the bailment, and other distinctly different conditions be attached to the bailment, the statute then has no applica- tion, (m) Or, should the statutory conditions referred to be expressed in the instrument, and in addition thereto other conditions be embraced, not within the operation and effect of the statute, tlien if that part of the instrument which brings it within the Act can be severed from the rest, the instrument, as to the rest, is not invalid for want of com- pliance with the statute, (n) and this is the case whether the illegality be created by statute or by common law. (o) But if severance cannot be made, then the whole is void, if the statute is not observed. And it may be on the principle of (I) FUiatraiilt v. Goldie, Q. R. 2 Q. B. 368: Staron v. Comp. des Moteurs au Gaz, S. V. 90 2, 113 : La Banqne d'Hochelaga v The Waterous Co., 27 C. S. R. 406. (m) Baldwin v. Benjamin, 16 U. C. Q. B. 52 : Mathers v. Lynch, 28 U. C. Q. B. 354: Waiker v. yUes. 18 Gr. 212. (») Kitohvng v. HicJcs, 6 O. R. 739: Movoat y. Clement, 3 Man. L. R. 585. See Hughes v. Little, 17 Q. B. ©. 204. (o) Pickering v. Ilfracomie Ry. Co., 8 L. R. 250: Re Browning, 9 Ch. 583. SECTION ONE. 28 rejection and retention, when the contract is severable, that an instrument under the Act, given by two bailees to a bailor, or taken by two bailors from a bailee, may be, in the one case, invalid only, so far as the interest of one bailee is concerned, and in the other valid only so far as the interest of one bailor is concerned, (p) The mind has only to speculate upon the many kinds of conditions which can be attached to the bailment of chattels to discover that the statute is very limited in its operations. A condition is that which is referred to an uncertain chance, which may or may not happen: it is a restraint an- nexed to a thing, so that by the non-perforlnance, the party to it shall receive prejudice and loss; and by the perform- ance, commodity or advantage. Conditions are affirmative, which consist in doing an act ; are negative, which consist of not doing an act; are restrictive, for not doing a thing; are compulsory, as that the bailee shall do an act; are single, as, to do one thing only ; are copulative, as, to do divers things ; are disjunctive, as, to do one of several things ; are prece- dent; (g) and yet the extent of the term is not exhausted. Ingenuity then, will discover many cases to which the sta- tute has no application; and doubtless many methods of evading its terms. (7) "Bailment, from the French iailler, to deliver, is a delivery of goods in trust, upon a contract expressed or im- plied that the trust shall be faithfully executed on the part of the bailee. It is a delivery of goods to another person for a particular use; as to a carrier to convey to London, to an innkeeper to secure in his inn, or the like. Here there is no absolute property in either the bailor or the bailee. The person delivering, or him to whom it is delivered for the bailor, hath only the right, and not the immediate possession ; the bailee hath the possession, and only a temporary right. But it is a qualified property in them both, and each of them is entitled to an action, in case the goods be damaged or taken (p) Ex parte Brown, in re Reed, 9 Ch. D. 389. (g) Whart. Law Lex. 24 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. away: (r) the bailee on account of Ms immediate posses- sion, (s) the bailor because the possession of the bailee is mediately his possession also. (/) The vendee in fact has this right of action, even after condition broken, on the ground that being responsible for the goods he is entitled to sue for them, (u) In all instances of bailment there is a special qualified property transferred from the bailor, to the bailee, together with the possession. It is not an abso- lute property because of his contract for restitution, the bailor having still left in him the right to a chose in action, grounded upon such contract. And on account of this quali- fied property of the bailee he may, as well as the bailor, main- tain an action against such as injure or take away these chat- tels. .The bailor, the carrier, the innkeeper, the agisting farmer, the pawnbroker, the distrainor, and the general bailee, may all of them vindicate, in their own right, this their general interest, against any stranger or a third person. For, being responsible to the bailor if the goods are lost or damaged by his wilful default or gross negligence, or if he do not deliver up the chattels on lawful demand, it is there- fore reasonable that he should have a right of action against all other persons who may have purloined or injured them that he may always be ready to answer the call of the bailor, {v) Blackstone has divided bailments thus: — (i) Depositum, or a naked bailment of goods to be kept for the use of the bailor without recompense. (ii) Commodatum — Where goods or chattels that are use- ful are lent to the bailee gratis, to be used by him. (iii) Socatio rei — Where goods are lent to the bailee to be used by him for hire. (r) Nicols V. Bastard, 2 C. M. & R. 659: Tyr. & G. 156, 1 Gale. 295. (s) Mason v. Morgan, 24 U. C. Q. B. 328. (t) Mears v. London d S. W. Ri/. Co., 11 C. B. N. S. 850: 31 L. J. C. P. 220 : 6 L. T. N. S. 190. («) Harringfon v. King. 121 Mass. 269. (v) Blackstone. vol. 2. .•i96, 451, 4ri2 : Lord Holt, Coggs v. Bernard, 1 Sm. L. O. 147-184. SECTION ONE. 25 (iv) Vadium — Pawn. (v) Locatio operis faciendi — Where goods are delivered to be carried, or something is to be done about them, for a reward, to -be paid to the bailee. (vi) Mandatum—A deliver}- of goods to somebody, who is to carry them, or do something about them gratis. Again, bailments may be said to be properly divisible into three kinds: — (i) Those in which the trust is exclusively for the benefit of the bailor, or of a third person, when the bailee is liable for gross negligence only. (ii) Those in which the trust is exclusively for the benefit of the bailee, who is then bound to the very strictest dili- gence^ and (iii) Those ia which the trust is for the benefit of both parties, or of both, or one of them, and a third party, when the bailee must exercise an ordinary and average degree of diligence. The first embraces deposits and mandates ; the second, gratuitous loans for use; and the third, pledges or pawns, and hiring and letting to hire. («;) It is unnecessary to consider the subject of bailments as embraced by the first and second definitions above given, as the limited nature of bailments to which the statute applies makes such a course unnecessary. Indeed, it is somewhat difficult, if the word " bailment " be correctly used in the statute, to bring within even the third of the foregoing defi- nitions, the transactions contemplated by the present Act. A pledge or pawn of course is not contemplated by the stat- ute. Such has been defined thus : " When goods or chattels are delivered to another as a pawn to be security for money bor- rowed of him by the bailor, (x) or as security for the per- formance of an engagement, {y) (ic) Story's Bailments. (x) Lord Holt, Coggs v. Bernard, 2 Ld. Raym. 909, 913. (y) 1 Domat B. 3 tit. 1, § 1, art. 1. 26 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. Hence, though the statute aims at transactions within the general definition of bailment " as a delivery of goods in trust, upon a contract express or implied that the trust shall be faithfully executed on the part of the bailee," it appears as if, of the various classes of bailments, except it be that of hiring and letting to hire, none of them exactly fit the cir- cumstances the statute is intended to meet. Where a chattel is delivered by one to another under an agreement that the latter may purchase it on compliance with certain conditions, and if he pays for it within a specified time he is to become the owner, but if not, he is to pay a sum agreed upon for the use of the property, the transaction is technically a bailment and not a conditional sale, (2) but the writer ventures the opinion (a) that, notwithstanding the alternative open to the bailee of paying for the use of the chattel, the right given to purchase would bring the transaction within the Act, be- cause that portion of the agreement can be severed from the rest. (Z») There can, however, be no question that where property is delivered to a purchaser who is to have the use of it, the vendor reserving to himself the naked title and the right to reclaim the property if not paid for, with no further liability for the purchase money on the part of the purchaser, that the transaction is a conditional sale and not a bail- ment, (c) The statute insists that the bailment shall be in writing, at least as against subsequent purchasers and mortgagees. The probabilities are then that in most cases the legal lia- bility of both bailor and bailee is to be ascertained from the written contract. The responsibility of either bailor or bailee may be lessened or enlarged either by express or im- plied contract. When by writing, the writing governs, for an express contract of the parties may vary or supersede the («) Sargent v. (Hie, 8 N. H. 325 : Mason v. Lindsay, L. R. 4 Ont. 365. (a) See Goldie cG McGulloch v. Harper. 81 Ont. R. 284. (6) Kitching v. Hicks, 6 O. R. 739: Mowat v. Clement, 3 Man. L. R. 585 : Hughes v. Utile. 17 Q B. D. 204. (c) Bryant v.,Crosl)y, 36 Me. 562. SECTION ONE. 27 obligations implied b)- law. (d) When not in writing, then common sense and natural justice will help to define what are the legal obligations of the parties. To produce the legal obligation of the contract of bailment, (i) The bailment must not be prohibited by law. (ii) It must be between persons competent to contract. (iii) There must be a free and voluntary consent between the parties, (e) A conditional sale under the Act of a piano to be used in a house of ill-fame is repugnant to sound morals, and there- fore illegal. The consideration for the sale may be lawful but the use being imlawful the sale and agreement incident thereto, are void. Nor does it matter whether the unlawful purpose is carried out or not, provided, of course, that the intention of the one party to put the instrument to an un- lawful use is known to the other at the time of the agree- iQent. (/) If the vendor knows that the purchaser intends to apply the goods to an illegal or immoral purpose, he cannot recover the price, and it does not matter whether the seller does or does not expect to be paid out of the fruits of the illegal use of the property. But the vendor if innocent can rescind such a contract of sale when he discovers the truth, and he can do this without assigning any reason at the time of the rescission, but the rescission must be before the con- tract of sale is completely executed; if afterward?, it is too late, and the sale will not be set aside, (g) The rules of common law, establishing the incapacity of certain parties to contract (except when varied by legisla- tion), apply to contracts under the statute, thus, infants, lunatics, idiots, and persons of unsound mind are debarred from contracting either as bailor or bailee. (d) Jones on Bailments, §31, 33, 34. (e) Story on Bailments, 378. (f) Pearce v. Brooks (ISm) . L. R. 1 Ex. 213. (g) Goivan v. Mibowen. (1867K L. R. 2 Ex. 230: Ayerst v. Jen- kins (1873), 16 Ex. 275. •28 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. Slight diligence only is required to be exercised on the part of a bailee in the care, custody and safety of property when the bailment is for the sole benefit of the bailor; when for the sole benefit of the bailee, then great diligence is demanded on his part, and when for the mutual benefit of both bailor and bailee the law expects ordinary diligence alone to be exercised by the bailee. In the first case he is liable only for gross neglect, in the second ease for slight neglect, and in the last case for ordinary neglect, (h) From this it may be concluded that, unless the written instrument provides differently, ordinary diligence must be exercised by the bailee, who will only be responsible for ordi- nary neglect. The contract between the parties may extend the bailee's liability to inevitable accidents, or to damage or loss, by fire or the acts of God or other vis major, (i) but if not, the bailee then is not liable on account thereof, (j) nor is he liable for loss through robbery by force, though for a loss by a private or a secret theft he may be liable, if a proper degree of diligence has not been used. If the bailee is guilty of any fraud, whereby loss ensues, then of course the bailee is responsible, and, because the law will not let a man contract to be safely dishonest, a bailee cannot protect himself in writing against loss of this nature. Gross neg- ligence (fc) may be equivalent to fraud, and though a bailee may protect himself against loss through negligence, however gross, should the element of fraud enter into the bailee's conduct the writing cannot shield him. The ordinary diligence expected to be exercised by a bailee is that " degree of diligence which men in general exert in respect to their own concerns." (Z) Ordinary diligence may (ft), Jones on Bailments, 16, 119: Coggs v. Bernard, 2 Ld. Raym. 919 : Story on Bailments, §23. (t) Atkinsofi v. Ritchie, 10 East. 530: Barker v. Hodgson, 3 M. & S. 267: DigJiiy y.. Atkinson, 4 Camp. 275. (j) Searle v. Lavrick, L. R. 9 Q. B. 122. (k) For meaning of term, "gross negligence," see Fitzgerald r. G. T. R. W. Co., 4 App. R. 601. (I) Reynolds v. Roxburgh (1886), 10 Ont. R. 649. SECTION ONE. 29 be said to be the common prudence which men of business and heads of families usually exhibit in aiiairs which are in- teresting to them, {in) Or •' it is the care wliich every person of common prudence and capable of governing a family takes of his own concerns.'' What is ordinary diligence then depends more on fact than on law, and is governed by an infinite variety of circumstances. The actual state of society, habits of business, usages of life, the degree of danger, the very country or section of country wherein parties are, the nature, quality, bulk of value of the article bailed, are all circum- stances which may have to be considered in fixing the degree of diligence incumbent on a bailee to exercise. These con- siderations arise mainly where the contract is silent as to the degree of care required to be exercised, but if, as we have seen, the written contract narrows or enlarges the liability of the bailee, the contract has alone to be looked for. If the bailee is required to exercise great diligence, the degree is to be measured by that which a very prudent person would take of his own concerns; (n) if but slight negligence, then by that which anj"^ person of common ordinary prudence would exercise in his own matters, (o) Diligence is but a relative term for negligence, and as there are degrees in the one so there are in the other. There are in the civil law as in our law, three degrees of negligence : (i) Gross fault or neglect (lata culpa). (ii) Ordinary fault or neglect (levis culpa). (iii) Slight fault or neglect {levissima culpa). Ordinary negligence exists where ordinary diligence is absent. Slight negligence exists when great diligence is absent, and gross negligence exists when slight diligence is absent. (»») Story on Bailments, §11. (») Vaughan v. Newlove, 3 Bing. N. G. 468, 475. (o) Taiighan \. Xeiclove, snpra. 30 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. As in the case of diligence so in the case of negligence. When the bailment is for the sole benefit of the bailor the law requires only slight diligence, so relatively he is respon- sible for gross neglect, of whom, for the benefit of the bailee, the law requires great diligence, and therefore he is responsible for slight neglect. Where for the benefit of both parties, reciprocally, then as the law requires ordinary diligence on the part of the bailee, so is he responsible for ordinary neglect. The duty devolving upon the bailee of a chattel under the Act is to "put the thing to no other use than that for which it is taken; to use it well; to take care of it; to restore it at the time appointed; to pay the price for it, or the rent for it as the case may be, and in general to observe whatever is prescribed by the contract, or by law, or by custom, (p) If he sells or parts with it, the bailment is at an end, and the rights of the bailor are as if the bailee were a stranger, and he may recover the chattel from him into whose possession it has passed, or may sue him for the price, (q) Thus it is clear a vendee must not put an article delivered to him to a different use than that intended at the time when he received it from the vendor. (?•) If he does, and injury to the property is the result, he renders himself liable to the bailor, and he is similarly liable if the wrongful con- duct, default or negligence be that of his children or ser- vants, (s) It is not every unauthorized use however that creates a liability in the bailee as for conversion of the chattel: but such an act as is clearly inconsistent with the ownership being in another, as is so repugnant to the contract as to practically negative the right of the bailor in the chattel, at once entitles the bailor to resume posses- (p) 1 Domat B. 1, tit. 4, §2, art. 1. (q) Fenn v. Bittlestow, 7 Bxch. 152: Bryant v. Wardell, 2 Bxch. 479 : Ex p. Leslie, 20 Ch. D. 131. (r) Edwards v. Carr, 13 Gray 234: Milton v. Salisbury, 13 Johns 211 : Story on Agency, § 452 to 461. is) Story on Bailments, § 400. SECTION ONE. 31 sion. (t) When it comes to a question of the vendee's lia- bility for the price of a chattel conditionally sold under the present statute, which has been lost when in the vendee's possession, then though the property in the goods has not passed by the terms of the agreement, the vendee is liable for the full price to the vendor, notwithstanding no negligence is shewn on his part, or that the loss is found to be in no way attributable to him. (m) The reason for this is that the vendor under a contract has done all that he was required to do. The vendee has an interest in the property which he could convey, and which is subject to execution at the suit of a creditor, (v) and which will ripen into an absolute title by the payment of the purchase money, (w) and he has the actual legal and rightful posses- sion in which he must not be disturbed, {w'^) with a right of property upon the performance of a certain imposed condition, (x) The effect of this statute (y) is to give to the vendee an equitable right to the property, and even though the agreement be, that on default, all pay- ments shall be treated as rent, and the agreement be deemed a hire agreement, the substance of the transaction will be a present sale and purchase, (z) and the vendee will still be liable to the vendor, in case of loss by fire, upon a promissory note given bv him in part for the price of the chattel sold. But the loss may fall upon the vendor if in an action on such a note there is proved to be a total failure of consideration or a partial failure as to something which is ascertained and liqui- dated, (a) A distinction may be found to exist between the (t) Donald v. Stickling, L. E. 1 Q. B. 585. («) Hesselbacker v. Ballantyne, 28 Ont. K. 182: Goldie & Mc- Culloch V. Harper, 31 Ont. R. 28i. (v) 62 Vic, 2nd Sess., cap. 7, sec. 9. («)) 1 Whai-t. Cont. 617. (w^) Bridgman v. Robinson, L. It. 7 Ont. 'Ml. (as) Vincent v. Cornell, 13 Mass. 296. iv) R. S. O. cap. 149. («) Meredith, C..I., Goldie ) See Western Milling Co. v. Darke, 2 Terr. L. R. 49 : Suther- land V. Marmix, 8 Man. L. R. 541 : Boyce v. McDonald, 9 Man. L R 297. (g) Western Milling Co. y. Drake, 2 N. W. T. Rep. 34. 40 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. has not taken actual possessioji of the article in queetion. The measure of damages in such a case will be the full price of the goods, because the right of possession has been trans- ferred to the vendee, and the vendor has done all that the con- tract required him to do. (q^) (9) There is nothing objectionable in the sale of a chattel upon the terms that the ownership shall not pass until the happening of a certain event, (r) which is usually the pay- ment of the price. It is to sales of this kind that the. statute applies. Hence it is not necessary to consider that line of cases wherein questions arise as to when the pro- perty in a chattel passes ; or, if it has passed, so as to fix the rights of the vendor and the vendee, and the consequences to either of them as regards their respective creditors, (s) When the ownership in a chattel is changed, but not the pos- session, then another statute is invoked, (t) but, to all cases of manufactured goods, including pianos, organs and other musical instruments, but not furniture, except from and after • the 1st of January, 1907, when the possession changes, but not the ownership, then the present statute pre- vails. It may become necessary to ascertain the intention of the parties regarding a change of ownership, and according as the intention may or may not be that the ownership changes, so is it decided whether or not the statute has any bearing. The question of property passing being simply one of intention, (M)when such intention is clearly established, cadit questio. This intention is gathered , by the circumstances of the transaction, the conduct of the parties, and the terms of the written contract, (v) To make an instrument a mortgage when in form and nature a conditional sale, or rice versa, the (q^) Tufts V. Poness, 32 Ont. 51. •. Dooley, supra. 44 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. attached to the realty which thereby becomes realty is a sufficient indication of ownership to stop the real owner as against an innocent purchaser for value, (m) Again, if a man, whatever his real meaning may be, so conducts himself that a reasonable man would take his conduct to mean a certain representation of facts, and that it was 'a true repre- sentation, and that the latter intended to act upon it in a particular way, and he with such belief does act in that way to his damage, the first is estopped from denying that the facts were as represented. And finally, if in the transaction itself which is in dispute, one has led another into the belief of a certain state of facts by conduct of culpable negligence calculated to have that result, and such culpable negligence has been the proximate cause of leading and has led the other to act by mistake upon such belief to his prejudice, the second cannot be heard afterwards, as against the first, to shew that the state of facts referred to did not exist." (n) But possession is not the equivalent of title, and consequently no case has ever decided that the owner of goods is estopped merely because he has entrusted with the possession of hi« property a person who wrongfully sells it to another, even though that person is engaged in a business in the course of ■nhich he sells goods of the same kind as those which have been delivered to him as bailee. If this were not the law. then no man could safely leave his watch with a watchmaker who sells watches, or his carriage with a carriage maker who sells carriages, (o) It is quite clear in such a transaction that the Factors Act {p) does not apply, because to success- fully invoke this statute two elements of fact must combine. First, the goods must be entrusted to the bailee as a factor (m) McDonald v. Weeks, 8 Grant Chy. 297. (») Moss, C..J.A., in Mason v. Bicklc, 2 App. R. 295. See Garr V. London d- A'. W. R. Co., L. R. 10 C. P. 307 : Pickard v. Sears, 6 A. & E. 469: Freeman v. Cooke, 2 Ex. 654: Trust cC- Loan Co.' y. Ruttan, 1 S. C. R. 546 at pp. 584-7 : Jordan v. Money, 5 H. L. Cases 185 : Clarke v. Hart, G H. L. Cases 656. (o) Strong, J., Forristal v. McDonald, 9 Can. S. C. R. at p. 17: City Bank v. Barrow, 5 App. Cases 664. (p) R. S. O. cap. 152. SECTION ONE. • -15 or agent for sale, and secondly, the bailee must carry on the business or calling of a factor, (q) Nor does the somewhat similar Act known as the Bills of Sale Act (r) have any bearing, because, first, the goods in question must be mer- chandise, and manufactured goods may not be merchandise; and secondly, the person to whom they are transferred must be a trader and the goods must be sold or transferred to him as such trader for the purpose of resale by him in the ordi- nary course of business. While possession may be some evidence of title, it is not the equivalent of title. If it were so, then the Legislature have needlessly passed the two stat- utes just referred to ; and any contest would he limited to the two questions of fact, namely, the actual possession of the person assuming to sell the chattel, and the bona fides of the purchaser. A simple belief entertained by one party in a state of facts upon which belief such party acts, does not estop a third party from denying the existence of such facts, even though the conduct of such third party, if innocent of any wilful intent to deceive, gave rise to the belief, (s) The fact of possession of a chattel remaining with a bailee after the time of payment has elapsed when it was to be re-taken by the bailor, does not estop the bailor from setting up title thereto as against a purchaser from the bailee. Nor even the production by the bailee of a note given in purchase of the chattel, at least when the note bears no apparent refer- ence to the purchase of the chattel, (t) And of course the bailor or vendor, by taking a note upon the contract of con- ditional sale, does not thereby put an end to the contract, (m) not even when he discounts the note or renews it, the latter practice being so common as to be cognizant to all commercial men. (v) (g) Puentes v. Montk. h. R. 4 C. P. 9.3: Cole v. N. W. Bank, L. R. 10 C. P. 3.j4: Johnston v. Vrcdit Lyoniiuis Co., 3 O. P. D. 32. (r) R. S. O. cap. 148, sec. 41 (1). (s) Mason v. Bickle, 2 App. K. 2\)1. (t) Mason v. Sickle, supra. ( u ) Stephenson v. Rice, 24 C. V. ^.jO : Loring v. Loring, 64 lie. 550: Kent y. Buck. 4.5 Vt. 18: but see Ballard >. Burgett. 40 N. Y. 314. (V) McEican v. Smith. 2 11. L. (_'. 30!). 46 • CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. By registering a mechanics' lien against the realty of one to whom the vendor has sold a chattel to be affixed to the realty will not estop the latter from suing in detinue for the article so sold, (w) Where, again, upon the faith of a written undertaking to deliver goods, a third party is in- duced to buy from him to whom the goods were to be de- livered, the original vendor is not estopped from refusing to act on the written undertaking, (x) '"•A declaration to one man rarely operates as an estoppel in favor of another, for it would generally be unjust to carry the responsibility arising from a statement further than the person to whom it is addressed, {y) Declarations may be so general as to indicate an intention to reach and influence the public at large, but even then to operate as an estoppel against the declarant, there is required some evi- dence from which an inference can be drawn that the party injured, knew and was influenced by the declarations, (s) Estoppel does not pass title. It simply precludes the owner from setting up title against the purchaser. There- fore if the owner stand by and allow a chattel to be sold as the chattel of another who omits to take possession, and then the owner sells to another person, the latter will be preferred, for he is not privy to the estoppel, and therefore is not estop- 23ed from asserting title to the chattel, (a) The printing or painting of a man's name upon a chattel does not estop the true owner so doing from afterwards proving ownership of the chattel, but '" when the owner, by his own act or consent, has given another, such evidence of the right to sell or otherwise dispose of his goods as, accord- ing to the custom of trade or the common understanding of the world, usually accompanies the authority of sale or dis- position, then, if the person so intrusted with the possession (w) VH?cf(» Iron Co. v. Rapid Citi/ Co. (1894). 9 Man. R. 577. (jl Farmloc v. Bain, L. R. 1 C. P. D. 44.5. (y) Burton, .J.A., ^Vull. Hunter, 19 Hun. 180. (e) White v. Garden, 10 C. B. 927. (f) Baldwin v. Benjamin. 16 U. C, Q. B. 52; see Sutherland v. Kixon, 21 U. C. Q. B. 631 : Brooks v. Lester. 33 Md. 65 : Carpenter r. Blot, 1 E. D. Smith 491. 48 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. if the statute is complied with, from a third person deriving title from the vendee. And, when the payment is to be by instalments, the title remains in the vendor until all instal- ments are fully paid; but the vendee may perfect his title by tendering the vendor the full amount of the purchase money, and if the instalments carry interest, then also the full amount of interest, even though the instalments be not due. (g) The vendee cannot relieve himself from liability by returning or offering to return the property, (h) nor can the vendor, if after default he allows the vendee to retain possession, and then accepts a part payment, disturb the ven- dee, for he 'thus waives the forfeiture, and the vendee's rights arise anew to acquire the title by payment, and they remain to him until another demand by the vendor for payment is refused by the vendee, (i) The fact of the purchase or con- sideration money not being payable to the vendor does not deprive the statute of its application. It is a sufficient legal consideration that the consideration moves from one party to a second party, and the ownership of the chattel is re- tained in a third party. It makes no difference that the vendee or bailee give his promissory note to the vendor for the amount of the con- sideration money, (;') unless of course the note is taken in satisfaction of the purchase money, or unpaid part thereof, as the case may be, (&) and the mere taking of a note for the purpose of closing an account is not proof that it was taken in satisfaction of the purchase money, (l) And taking a cheque from the buyer does not ordinarily operate as pay- ment to prevent the seller from retaking the goods, if the cheque is not paid, (m) (j7) Cushman v. Irwell, 7 Hun. (N.Y.) 525. (7i) Appleton v. Nonpalk, .53 Conn.. 4 Henry v. Tufts, 25 111. App. 101. , (/) Benjamin, p. 301. (/) Stephenson v. Rice, 24 U. C. C. P. : WaU-er v. Hyman, 1 App. R. 346. {k) yordhcimer v. Rolinson, 2 App. R. 305. {1} Nordheimer ■/. Robinson, 2 App. R. 305. (to) Benjamin on Sales, 299. SECTION ONE. 49 There can be no objection to the vendor's discounting the note given for the purchase money. His so doing cannot be urged as a waiver of the owner's right of property, nor, of course, as constituting payment of the consideration money (w). Nor does the fact of providing that the purchase money be paid as rent in weekly or monthly or longer instalments, in any way prevent the application of the statute, (o) But when the contract and the note are contained and interwoven in the same instrument, the note is not negotiable, in fact it is not a promissory note, (p) Of course much depends upon what the contract contains. If there is nothing in the con- tract except that which accelerates the time of payment upon certain events, and nothing which makes payment of the note conditional, the instrument does not lose its character as a promissory note: but the additional words that the title and property in the article for which the note is given shall remain in the vendor until the note is paid (and with- out these or words of similat meaning the instrument is not within the Act) are fatal to the instrument as a negotiable promissory note, because the purchaser is not compelled to pay when the day of payment arrives unless at the same time he gets the property with a good title. There is here a con- ^ dition, and the payment to be made is therefore not an ab- solute unconditional payment, such as is required to make a good promissory note, (q) On the other hand, an instru- ment in the form of a promissory note with conditions there- under written may be an instrument evidencing a conditional sale, (r) The promise to pay contained in the note, and the obligation to transfer the title to the chattel are mutual, each (n) Mason v. Sickle, 2 App. R. 295: Hall v. HazlUt, 7 Ont. App. 305. (o) Xordhetmer v. Robinson, 2 App. R. 305 ; Goldie d ilcGullocK V. Harper, 31 Ont. R. 2S4. (p) Third National Bank v. Armstrong, 25 Minn. 530: Mersey Htecl Go. V. Naylor, 9 App. Cases 440 ; Wettlaufer v. Scott 20 O. A. R. 652. ((/) Dominion Bank v. Wiggins, 21 O. A. R. 275. (r) Wettlaufer v. Scott, 20 Ont. App. 652. B.C. A. —4 50 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. is the sole consideration for the other concurrent condition, and each depends upon the other. And if, prior to default, the vendor takes possession of the property and disposes of it, so that on maturity of the vendee's promise to pay, an observance of the condition on the part of the vendee be- comes impossible, no action can be maintained against the maker of the note, (s) In fact the vendee never acquires any title or right to possession, and by the vendor's act, is deprived of his power of acquiring any by payment of the price, (t) So great is the obligation on the vendor's part to restore the chattel, that even when he takes and sells the chattel, after having sued and obtained judgment on the notes given therefor, the vendee can open up and go behind the judgment (because the transaction of sale subsequent to the judgment shews that the consideration for the judg- ment has disappeared by the intentional act of the vendor — the judgment creditor) and have the judgment declared in- valid, (u) The rule of law is that where there is a contract in which there are two parties, each side having to do some- thing, if the failure to perform one part of it goes to the root of the contract, goes to the foundation of the whole, it, is a good defence to say, " I am not going to perform my part of it, when that which is the root of the whole and the sub- stantial consideration for my performance is defeated by your misconduct." (v) Hence, the balance of the purchase money under such circumstances, cannot be recovered from the vendee, and the contract of the vendor, once he has dis- posed of the specific chattel, cannot be fulfilled by substitut- ing another article of a similar make and material, (w) When, however, the property in the chattel by the sale passes to the vendee, and by the agreement there is no right re- (s) Third National Bank v. Armstrong, supra. (t) Minneapolis Marvester Works v. Bailey, 27 Minn. 495. («) Arnold v. Playter, 22 O. R, 608. See Plessisville v. Levesgue, Q. R. 22 S. C. 306, as to effect on vendor's position of obtaining a judgment. (v) Cowan v. Fisher, 31 Out. E. 426: Mersey Steel Co. v. Xwijlor, 9 App. Cases 438: Freath v. Burr. L. E. 9 C. P. 208. (w) Sawyer v. Pringle. 18 O. A. R. 228. SEUTIUN ONE 51 served to resell, then, if the vendor retakes possession and sells, the vendor is guilty of a mere tortious act, for which the vendee has his remedy; he may bring trespass against the vendor for taking possession of the chattel, and may recover the actual value of the article at the time it was taken; but he, the vendor, can sue for the balance of the purchase money. This results from the fact that there has been no rescission of the contract. Where, however, there is a reservation to take and resell on default, and the vendor exercises that right, it operates as a rescission of the original sale, and dissolves the contract, (a;) The fact of the vendor taking possession of the article, using it, and offering it for sale, and neglecting to take proper care of it, may be treated by the vendee as a rescission of the contract, and the vendor will lose his right as against the vendee, (x^) Then, in those eases wherein by the agreement it is provided that the property remains in the vendor, who may retake possession on default and sell, and the purchase money be applied pro tanto on what is due, and the vendees are to remain, liable for the difference, the difference can then be sued for, because of this special agreement vpith- out which no action for any part of the price can be main- tained, if the vendors have taken possession of and sold the chattel, (y) (11) The words "shall only be valid as against" have a meaning and effect which requires to be noticed. Instru- ments under the Act shall be invalid as against subsequent purchasers or mortgagees without notice in good faith, unless the provisions of the Act are complied with. In other words, such an instrument shall be "null and void." (z) (j) Page v. Cowasjee Eduljee. L. R. 1 P. C. 127: 3 Moo. P. C. N. S. 499: Stephens v. Wilkinson, 2 B. & Ad. 320: Chi'iu-i/ v Tiall 5 H. & N. 288. (»') Harris v. DusHn, 1 Terr. L. R. 404. (y) Arnold v. Playter, 22 O. E. 608. See Frye v. Milligan, 10 Out. R. 509, Tremeear, p. 88. (z) As to the meaning of which words, in this connection, «fe Billiter v. Young, 6 Ell. & Bl. 1. 52 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. In a somewhat analogous sense an Imperial Act (a) uses the words " fraudulent and void," and the difference between these words and those in the present statute, is referred to in ex parte Blaiberg. (b) This is the intention of the Act, and is the effect of it, yet by the peculiar wording of the section, the negative inference is, that if an instrument shall only be valid as against the persons mentioned on certain conditions, if only valid as to them, then as to others not mentioned in the Act that the instrument shall be invalid, but of course the inference has not the force of giving a meaning to the section different to that intended. The meaning of the words "as against" found in this statute when read with the subsequent words "purchasers and mortgagees," etc., is, that the instrument of conditional sale shall be void, in order to give effect to the purchase of the purchaser, or mortgage of the mortgagee, but no fur- ther, (c) and, so soon as the claims of the persons protected by the statute are satisfied, the vendor or bailor of the chat- tel becomes entitled eo instanti, to any benefits that may remain thereafter. The statute does not mean that the in- strument shall be void to all intents and purposes because it does not say so; but that it shall be void simply and only to let in the claim of the purchaser or mortgagee, as the case may be. Such is the meaning to be attached to any statute, when it declares a deed void as against a particular person. It makes it void merely to the extent of his claim, (d) The words of the statute are " shall only be valid." This means in fact " invalid," and this latter word in turn means having no force, effect or efficacy: void; null, (e) Yet, the words are not used in the sense of being absolutely void, but rela- tively void : that is, voidable, capable of being avoided, and (a) 41 & 42 Vic. cap. 31, sec. 8. (6) L. R. 23 Ch. D. 254. (c) Ex parte Blaiberg, L. R. 23 Ch. D. 254. (d) In re Artistic Colour Printinr/ Co. : Ex parte Four:!: iji^cr. 21 Ch. I). 150 : Ex parte Blaiherg, supra. (e) Stale v. Gastecl. (Iiid.) 110, Ind. 174. SECTION ONE. 53 not that the transaction is a nullity as if it had never exist- ed, if) In fact, the word "void" is seldom regarded as im- plying a complete nullity except in a very clear case, (g) But the general rule is that where the word " void " is in- troduced for the benefit of parties only, it is construed to mean voidable; but if lised to secure a right to, or confer a benefit upon, the public, it will receive its full force and effect, and be held to mean null and incapable of confirma- tion. (Ji) Under the Imperial Act, 17 & 18 Vict., cap. 36, see. 1, it was at one time held in a case wherein the defendant made a bill of sale of his goods to S., which was not registered, and afterwards made a bill of sale which was registered, that although the unregistered bill of sale was not invalid as against the secured bill of sale, yet inasmuch as execution had issued against the defendant, and the statute made null and void the instrument as against execution creditors, the same was displaced altogether by reason of the execution, and therefore that S. could not set up his unregistered bill of sale, as against the subsequent instrument which was regis- tered, (i) (13) There are two classes of persons, against each of which an instrument under the Act shall be invafid. (i) Subsequent purchasers without notice in good faith for valuable consideration. (ii) Subsequent mortgagees without notice in good faith for valuable consideration. The consideration must be a valuable one. The purchaser or mortgagee must part with something of value, or must suffer some loss, and this, of course, will exclude a mere volunteer who takes by gift, devise or inheritance. (f) Ewell V. Daggs, 108 U. S. 148. (g) Brown v. Brouon, 50 N. H. 542. (ft) Retc V. Hipswell, 8 B. & C. 466: 15 E. G. L. 267: Pearce V. Morrice, 2 Ad. EI. 84. (t) Richards v. James, L. R. 2 Q. B. 285. 54 CONDlTlOTfAL SALES ACT. Having regard to the purpose of the Act there can be little doubt that the subsequent purchasers and mortgagees of the chattel are subsequent purchasers or mortgagees from the bailee, not froin the bailor. Apart from the statute it is quite clear that where the condition of prepayment is ex- press, then no absolute title passes until payment, and there- fore the vendee can give none to others; but here the statute steps in and says, the effect of failure to comply with its terms will be that the vendee can give to others such title if they be purchasers or mortgagees in good faith. The mortgagee stands on the same footing as a hona fide pur- chaser, and can acquire no title as against the vendor if the Act is complied with, (j) And an assignee can stand in no better position than his assignor, (fe) The persons protected by this Act are the same as those protected by the statute of the State of New York. (Z) And as in the latter Act, so in ours, creditors are excluded. Their rights are not increased, but remain just the same as if the Act had not been passed, and because a representative of creditors can have no higher rights than the creditors have, it follows that a liquidator of an insolvent vendee, as repre- senting creditors of the vendee, cannot be heard to take the objections open to others under the Act. Nor are these ob- jections open to him in his capacity as representing the vendor, because the contract of the vendor with the vendee stands good both against the vendor and the liquidator, (m) and a pledgee of property held under a contract of condi- tional sale is not within the protection of the statute, (n.) The reason of the statute declaring void an instrument under the Act, as against these two classes of persons unless its requisites are complied with, will appear obvious, when (j) Herring v. Willard, 2 Saudf. (N.Y.) 418. (fc) Benner v. Puffer, 114 Mass. 376. {D Laws of 1884, cap. 315: Bank's Rev. Stat. (4th ed.) 2522. (m) Re Canadian Camera Co., A. R. William^s ClaAm, L. R. 2 Ont. 677: FroAiik v. Batten, 49 (Hun.) N. T. 91. (n) Kauffman v. Klang, 16 Misc. Rep. (N. Y. Supreme Court 379). SECTION ONE. 55 it is remembered for a moment how easily a fictitious and undeserved financial standing can be secured by the apparent ownership of personal property. The wonder is, not at premature legislation in the interests of a community, but that legislation should be so long delayed. There can be no doubt of the wisdom of the statute. "Better to safeguard commercial morality, it is to make provision for giving pub- licity by registration to dealings such as this statute contem- plates. The effect of such transactions (though they be not contrary to law), is to protect the credit of a trader who is yet heavily weighted with undisclosed obligations. Grave suspicions must always arise in the minds of creditors whose claims are superseded by some instrument of peculiar char- acter, produced at a period of crisis, by which all the assets of their debtor are secured to a near relative." (o) Prior to coming into force of fhis statute, a transaction aimed at by this legislation would be perfectly good as against the parties designated now to be protected, provided there was an absence of fraud, fraud vitiating all things. iN'ow one of two things is required, so far as manufactured goods are concerned. (i) The name and address of the manufactiirer or vendor. (ii) A registration. One or other of these requisites must exist, and he who fails in both, must suffer for improperly enabling another to appear to the world as absolutely owning property which in reality belongs to another. An unauthorized registration, however, will not be sufficient to effect third persons with notice of the vendor's claim, nor will registration of an agree- ment of sale, which is not executed according to statute {e.g.) when executed by the vendor and not by the vendee, secure the benefits of the statute, {p) Between the parties themselves, however, that is, between the bailor and bailee, or the manufacturer or vendor and (o) Boyd, C., in Banks v. Rohinson, 15 O. E. p. 62i. (p) W. W. Kimhall Co. v. Mellon, 80 Wis. 133: 8. L. Sheldon Co. V. Mayers, 81 Wis. 627. 56 CONDITEONAL SALES ACT, vendee, no injury can result from a non-compliance with the statutory requirements: therefore, so far as they are con- cerned, and all claiming under them, their administrators or representatives, or as against any other title inferior to that of the immediate parties, except a subsequent purchaser or mortgagee as above indicated, a conditional sale where the possession changes but not the ownership, is valid without compliance with the statute, (q) It is valid without such compliance as against the credi- tors of the conditional vendee or bailee, for as already pointed out nowhere does it appear that the creditors of thr vendee or bailee are intended to be protected, (r) An execution credi- tor can have no better or higher right against the goods of his debtor, than the debtor himself, and, if the debtor had no right, except that of possession, the creditor can acquire no right, (s) But surely creditors should be safeguarded against a fic- titious position of one to whom they give credit, in the ordin- ary course of business. While a creditor, it is true, without the aid of a statute, cannot stand in any better relationship towards the chattels than the debtor, it must be remembered that it may be the very possession of these chattels by the debtor that induces the creditor to give him credit, and when it is further remembered that this possession in the debtor is by the act of his vendor, it may well be asked why in this Act (as they are in the Act relating to Bills of Sale and Chattel Mortgages), " creditors " are not included, (s^) In Coggill v. Hartford, etc., R. Co., 3 Gray (Mass.) 542, Bigelow, J., said : " It is difficult to see any good and satis- factory reason for the distinction which is attempted to be (g) Robinson v. McDonald, 2 B. & A. 134: Brougliton \. Brough- ton, 1 At. K. 625. (>■) Frank v. Batten, 49 Hun (N.Y.) !)]. (s) Osier, J.. Dominion Bank v. Davidson, 12 App. It. 92 : Beaver V. Lord Oxford. G D. M. & G. 507. (s^) " Creditors " are included in the Acts of the following States, viz. : Iowa, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri. Nebraska, New Hnmpshire, Texas, Vermont, Virginia, Washing-ton, Wisconsin. SECTION ONE. 57 made between the rights of the vendee and his creditors to goods sold and delivered on condition, and those of iona fide purchasers. All the cases turn on the principle that the com- pliance with the conditions of sale and delivery is, by the terms of the contract, precedent to the transfer of the pro- perty from the vendor to the vendee. The vendee in such cases acquires no property in the goods. He is only a bailee for a specific purpose. The delivery which in ordinary cases passes the title to the vendee, must take effect according to the agreement of the parties, and can operate to vest the pro- perty only when the contingency contemplated by the con- tract arises. The vendee, therefore, in such cases, having no title to the property, can pass none to others. He has only a bare right of possession; and those who claim under him, either as creditors or purchasers, can acquire no higher or better title. Such is the necessary result of carry- ing into effect the intention of the parties to a condi- tional sale and delivery. Any other rule would be equivalent to the denial of the validity of such contracts. But they certainly violate no rule of law, nor are they con- trary to sound policy. The cases above cited expressly re- cognize them as legal and valid contracts between the vendor on the one hand and the vendee and his creditors on the other. If valid to this extent, it necessarily follows that they are so for all purposes. If the property does not pass out of the vendor for one purpose, it certainly does not for another. If it remains in him at all, it is because such is the agreement of the parties, and it cannot be divested by any act of the vendee until the contract is fulfilled. A iona fide purchaser, as well as an attaching creditor, must acquire his title through the vendee. If the latter has no title, he can communicate none. The purchaser and the attaching credi- tor are in this respect upon the same footing. No equities can intervene to give the former a better right as against the original vendor than the latter; they are in aequali jure. Neither of them has a legal title to hold the property." The rights of creditors are protected in the North- West Terri- 58 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. tories (if) if the value of the goods sold be $15, or over; and in the Province of Nova Scotia the rights of creditors are similarly guarded, but vpithout any limit in value of the goods sold to the conditional vendee, (m) If the property be taken under execution the vendor can recover the property apart from any interference by the Act. (v) As the assignee for the benefit of creditors suc- ceeds only to such rights as the assignor had at the time of the assignment, he can acquire no title to property held by the assignor under a contract of conditional sale, where the title to such property has not yet become vested in the assignor by the performance of the condition, (w) As regards the two classes of persons above mentioned, (p. 53) however, the instrument as to them can only be made effectual by painting, printing, or engraving the name of the manufacturer, bailor, or vendor on the article sold, or by filing the instrument in accordance with the statute, (x) In this section the words "good faith" are inserted, re- quiring that a purchaser or mortgagee should be such in good faith. And when such is the case, the courts will hold the original vendor to the most strict proof of his rights before disturbing the position of such innocent purchaser, particularly when the transaction covers goods sold in the ordinary course of business, (y) Actual knowledge is not inconsistent with good faith, (z) but where collusion exists with the vendee or bailee to cheat the manufacturer or ven- dor, the purchase transaction as to them will be void, even though the statutory formalities have been omitted, (a) (*) Ord. 1898 cap. 44. («) A. S. S. cap. 28, sec. 8, sub-sec. 4. {v) Story on Sales § 213, 2 Kent's Comm. 497, Am. & Eng. End. of Law, vol. 7, p. 492. (w) Brewer v. Ford, 54 (Hun) N. T. 116; Oamplell Printing Press Co. v. Walker, 114 N. ¥. 7. (») Section 6, post. (y) Purtte v. Heney, 33 N. B. R. 607. (a) Sage v. Browning, 51 111. 217: McDowal v. Stewart, 83 111. 538. (a) Fuller v. Paige, 26 111. 358: Gooding v. RUey, 50 N. H. 1400 : Pattern v. Moore, 32 N. H. 382. SECTION' ONE. 59 It is possible a purchaser or mortgagee, for valuable con- sideration, though he may have notice of the existence of a conditional sale, may still be a purchaser in good faith; vi^here, for instance, the statute itself has not been complied with. (&) But it is hard to conceive hov, possessing actual know- ledge of the existence of a lona fide transaction, a purchaser or mortgagee can be such in good faith, so as to bring him- self within the description of persons protected by the sta- tute, (c) " I should have thought that anyone purchasing with no- tice or knowledge of a prior purchase was not a purchaser in good faith, for whose protection the statute was passed."' (d) But this view is not supported by authority, (e) although in the Province of Manitoba such a purchaser is put upon enquiry, and if he neglects his obvious duty in this regard, and suffers in consequence, he has no one to blame but him- self, and loses the protection of the Act. (/) The governing authority (g) although not ii^ keeping with the law in many of the States of the Union, (h) yet seems to follow the doc- trine of the English cases, which declare a purchaser with notice to be in bad faith as contradistinguished from good faith, when the notice is so full and direct as to render a subsequent purchase an act of positive fraud, (i) A subsequent purchaser is none the less a subsequent pur- chaser, because he has omitted to obtain actual possession, or immediate delivery with actual and continued change of pos- (6) Edwards v. English, 7 E. & B. 564: Morrin v. Bourke, 39 U. C. Q. B. 500: Moffat v. Goulson, 19 U. C. Q. B. 341: Gaplin v. Anderson, 88 111. 120: Porter v. Dement, 35 111. 478. (c) Farmers Loan & Trust Co. v. Eendrickson, 25 Barb. (N.Y.) 484: Tyler v. Strong, 21 Barb. (N.Y.) 198: Tiffany v. Warren, 37 Barb. (N.Y.) 571: Sagre v. Hewes, 32 N. I. Eg. 652. (d) Rose, J. Winn v. Snider, 26 Ont. A. R. at p. 386. (e) Moffat V. Coulson, supra. if) Sutherland v. Mannix. 8 Man. R. 541: Singer Mfg. Go. v. Converse (Colo.) 47 Pac. Rep. 264. (g) Moffat V. Coulson, supra. (h) Eng. & Am. Bncy. of Law, 1st ed., vol. 20, p. 584 et seg. (0 Chadwick v. Turner, L. R. 1 Ch. D. 310. 60 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. session. These words are not used in the statute to define a subsequent purchaser, upon whom, in fact, as against a prior purchaser, the statute does not impose any of its obliga- tions. (;') The latter can invoke for his protection the re- ■quirements of the statute in another, which he has himself failed to comply with. The Act avoids one, but the other stands good, except when it, in turn, is attacked by a further subsequent purchaser. A subsequent purchaser in good faith within the mean- ing of the statute, is one who becomes a buyer by mutual assent of the parties express or implied, and not one who has unlawfully converted the chattels: for instance, he is not a purchaser, within the statute, who has acquired the chattel by paying a judgment obtained against himself by the yendee or bailee of the property, (fc) A purchaser who has paid nothing is, of course, not within the protection of the statute, because he cannot be defrauded, and a lona fide purchaser can only receive protection to the extent of his payments. (Z) His purchase money must be actually paid, if it be simply secured it will not be siifficient, and he will not be protected unless his purchase is actually completed. It will not be sufl&cient if the transaction amounts to nothing more than an agreement for pur- chase, (m) A bona fide purchaser at a sheriffs or bailifiE's sale, is a purchaser intended to be protected by the statute, (n) and it has been held that a purchaser without notice cannot be considered a purchaser in bad faith, because he bought at a sale under execution at the instance of a creditor who was not entitled to subject the chattel to satisfy his claim, (o) but then such a purchaser cannot be a purchaser within the (/) Winn V. Snider, 26 Ont. A. R. 384. (fc) Jones on Chattel Mortgages, § 484. (J) Kohl V. Lynn, 34 Mich. 360. (m) Patten v. Moore, 32 N. H. 382: Vummings v. Tooley, 39 Iowa 195 : Kessey v. McEenry, 54 Iowa 187. (n) McNight v. Gordon, 13 Rich. (S. C.) Eq. 222. (o) McNight v. Gordon, supra. SECTION ONE. 6] definition of the Act, because he derives his title through a sale at the instance of a creditor, whose execution could have no force against the chattel, except to sell merely the vendee's interest' therein, and nothing more. The purchaser must be a purchaser from the bailee or vendee. A pre-existing debt is a suflBcient consideration to bring a purchaser within the meaning of this Act, and to entitle him to the benefit of its provisions, (p) "' A purchaser for value is a well known expression to the law. By the common law of the country the payment of an existing debt is a payment for valuable consideration. That was always the common law before the reign of Queen Elizabeth, as well as since. Commercial transactions are based upon that very idea. It is one of the elementary legal principles, as it seems to me, which belong to every civilized country ; and many of 'the commercial instruments which the law recognizes have no other consideration whatever than a pre-existing debt. The man who has a debt due to him, when he is paid the debt has converted the right to be paid into actual possession of the money : he cannot have both the right to be paid and the pos- session of the money. In taking payment he relinquishes the right, for the fruition of the right. In such a case the trans- action is complete, and to invalidate that transaction would be to lull creditors into a false security and to unsettle Imsi- ness.'' (q) A landlord may become a purchaser in good faith from his tenant, the vendee or bailee of the chattel, within the meaning of the statute, either by taking the goods of his tenant as so much payment of his rent, or by purchase in pursuance of arrangement, and if the statute has not been complied with, the rights of the owner of the chattel will be defeated. A landlord would still be such a purchaser within the Act, should he, with the tenant's consent, but without notice, purchase the goods in the tenant's possession (p) Williams 1'. Leonard d- Sons, 26 C. S. C. R. 406. {(J) See also Leask v. Scott, 2 Q. B. D. .376: Poirer v. Harris, 2 E. & B. S9: Ciirric v. itina, t. R. 10 Ex, 1.5.3. 62 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. at a bailiff's sale, instituted by himself by way of distress in order to secure his rent; (r) but having once made his distress, the landlord cannot afterwards be permitted to as- sume the character of a subsequent purchaser under the Act in order to cure defects of an illegal distress, (s) It formerly was the law that any goods upon the demised premises were liable to a distress for rent; but the law now is that a landlord shall not distrain for rent on the goods and chattels the property of any person, except the tenant or per- son who is liable for the rent, although the same are found on the premises; (t) but such alteration in the law does not exempt from distress for rent the interest of the tenant in any goods or chattels sold to him under a contract of purchase such as is aimed at by this statute, (u) The E. S. 0. 1897. cap. 170, s. 31, enacts as follows: — 31. — ■(!) A landlord shall not distrain for rent on the goods and chattels the property of any person except the tenant or person who is liable for the rent, although the same are found on the premises ; but this restriction shall not apply in favor of a person claiming title under or by virtue of an execution against the tenant, or in favor of any person whose title is derived by purchase, gift, transfer, or assignment from the tenant, whether absolute or in trust, or by way of mortgage or otherwise, nor to the interest of the tenant in any goods on the premises in the possession of the tenant under a contract for purchase, or by which he may or is to become the owner thereof upon performance of any condition, nor where goods have been ex- changed between two tenants or persons by the one borrowing or giv- ing from the other for the purpose of defeating the claim of or the right of distress by the landlord ; nor shall the restriction apply where the property is claimed by the wife, husband, daughter, son, daughter- in-law, or son-in-law of the tenant, or by any other relative of his, in ease such other relative lives on the premises as a member of the tenant's family. (2) Nothing in this section contained shall exempt from seizure by distress goods or merchandise in a store or shop managed or con- trolled by an agent or clerk for the owner of such goods of merchan- dise when such clerk or agent is also the tenant and in default and (r) Forlinger v. McDonald, 45 U. C. R. 233. (s) GriifiH V. McKensie, 46 U. C. R. 93. (t) R. S. O. 1897 cap. 17 O. S. 31. (h) Carrall v. Beard, 27 Ont. R. at p. 355. SKCTION ONE. b the rent is due in respect of the store or shop and premises rented therewith and thereto belonging, when such goods would have been liable to seizure but for this Act. (3) Subject to sections 39 and 40 the word " tenant " in this section shall extend to and include the sub-tenant and the assigns of the tenant and any person in actual occupation of the premises under or with the assent of the tenant during the currency of the lease, or while the rent is due or in arrear whether he has or has not attorned to or become the tenant of the landlord. Taxes, however, are different to rent. A chattel can be levied upon for taxes notwithstanding the property therein is in one not Liable for them. In such an event, the proper course to take is, for the vendor of the chattel to pay the taxes, and then he becomes entitled to be reimbursed by the person on whose behalf they were paid, (v) If a purchaser buy the interest of the vendee or bailee, and undertakes to pay the purchase money of the chattel, he cannot take advantage of the want of registration, or the absence of name from the chattel, (w) Nor can he do so, if the amount due to the vendor or manufacturer form part of the purchase money agreed upon between the purchaser and the vendee; (a;) but either a purchaser or subsequent mort- gagee is at liberty to shew that the claim of the manufacturer has been liquidated, or that the chattel itself was in point of fact never subject to the manufacturer's claim, (y) The circumstance that a subsequent mortgagee knew of the existence of the rights of the manufacturer, and in order to protect his own interests prejudiced those of the manu- facturer or vendor of the chattel, is not a good and sufficient reason for saying that the subsequent mortgage was not made or taken in good faith, and therefore prevented the mort- gagee from setting up non-compliance on the part of the vendor with the statutory requirements, (z) (t>) Edmmids v. Wallingford, 14 Q. B. D. 811. (w) Oreither v. Alexander, 15 Iowa 470. (iT) Kellog V. Secord, 42 Mich. 318- (V) Barry \-. Bennett. 7 Met. ( Mass. I 354: Housaionic & La Banks v. Martin, 1 Met. (Mass.) 294. (z) Tidey v. Craih. 4 O. R. (iOfi 6-i CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. A subsequent mortgagee in good faith is not required to comply with the statute requiring registration of chattel mort- gages (a) in order to maintain priority over an unregistered instrument under that Act. The reason is that this statute so states, namely, that such an instrument shall be void as against subsequent mortgagees. It does not say "valid only as against subsequent mortgagees who have registered, but simply as against subsequent mortgagees." (6) A subsequent mortgagee is pro tanto a purchaset. He is affected in the same way as a purchaser, and entitled to occupy the same legal position as regards want of notice, the existence of good faith, and any other statutory advan- tages possessed by a purchaser under the Act. (13) The consideration moving between the vendor and vendee of a chattel, to be within the Act, must be a money consideration; but the consideration required to move from the persons protected by the Act is a valuable consideration. While money is a valuable consideration, yet a valuable con- sideration covers more than mere money. A valuable consideration is money, or any other thing that bears a known value, or marriage, (c) or some other benefit to the person making a promise however slight. Or to a third person by the act of the promisee, (d) Or any loss, trouble, detriment or inconvenience to, or charge or liability upon the promisee, however slight, for the sake or at the instance of the promisor, though without any benefit to the promisor, (e) Or the suspension or forbearance of legal proceedings, the prevention of litigation or the settlement of disputes. (14) See ante foot note (3), and page 15. It must now not be overlooked that by reason of the Statute Law Amend. Act. (o) R. S. O. 1887, cap. 12.'5. (6) ' De Coiircey v. Collins, 21 N. J. Eg. 357. (c) Eeven v. Crawford, L. R. 6 Ch. D. 29: Wright v. Bedgrovt, W. N. (1870) 30-32. (d) Bailey v. Croft, 4 Taunt. Gil: Wdliamsoii v. Clements, 1 Taunt. 523. fe) Shirbyan v. Albany, Cro. Eliz. 67: March v. Culpepper, Cro. Car. 71. SECTION ONE. 65 6 Edw. VII. cap. 19^ which, however, does not come into force until the 1st January, 1907, the present statute is made to cover the case of all chattels. The question to be an- swered hereafter is not whether the article conditionally sold is manufactured, hut whether in law it is a chattel. Of course, as to manufactured chattels, they still will be gov- erned by section one, as heretofore, but as to all other chattels, the amending Act (see post sect. 2 (a)) will apply. (15) It must Be noticed that the time when the chattel must have the name and address of the manufacturer, bailor or vendor of the same painted, etc., thereon, or otherwise plainly attached thereto, is the time when possession is given to the bailee, not when the sale is made, although in practice, generally speaking, both are contemporaneous. Indeed, judging from an analogy with bills of sale, it is not necessary that the present Act be complied with, within any particular time after the sale, provided, of cotirse, it is complied with so far as name, etc., is concerned, when possession is given. (/) !Now, the important time to have the name upon the chattel is certainl)'" later on as much as at this par- ticular period. Still, such is the law, and if complied with, the vendor's rights are not lost to him by the name, address, etc., being obliterated while the chattel is in the possession of the vendee or under his control, not even if so obliterated at a paint shop to which the article has been sent to be painted by the vendee, with the knowledge of the vendee, for this know- ledge, it is said, cannot be changed into an assertion that the name and address of the vendor was not upon the article when possession was delivered as provided by the statute. ((/) Nor can it be assumed that the vendor knows that in the process of painting, the obliteration of his name is neces- sarily involved. Nor, further, is there .any duty cast upon ii) McDonald v. Gaunt. 30 Ont. R. 398; Wettlaufer v. Scott^ 20 Ont. A. E. 652. (g) Wettlaufer v. Scott, supra. P.C..K. — 5 66 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. him to prevent the vendee from obliterating the name, etc., or calling upon him (the vendor) to exercise any control over it in that respect during the period of bailment. But it might, and probably would, be a very different thing if the vendor in collusion with the vendee intended that in the repainting of the chattel his name, etc., should be painted out. In such case, while the statute has been fully complied with, a principle of law at once operates by which a man may and shall not benefit by his own fraud, and while this princi- ple of law in no way runs counter to the statute, it prevents it being made an instrument of injury to an innocent party. If the statute stopped at requiring the name to be painted, printed, stamped or engraved, it might have improved the section; but when the alternative is given of plainly attach- ing the name, etc., this the manufacturer may well do, there- by complying with the Act, and within a week, the object of the statute be defeated )iy the name becoming detached. Once detached one means of notice and, if employed, the only means of notice which need be adopted, is destroyed, and the public by a statutory trap exposed to the very danger the statute is designed to guard against. In answer to the claim of a subsequent purchaser the answer of the manufac- turer would be that he complied with the statute, by plainly attaching his name to the chattel, and that he was not at fault if, the name became detached. Yet it may be reasonably supposed that by attaching the name to the article is meant a reasonably permanent method fixing the name upon the article itself, and if anything less than the latter is done it is not sufficient. How much better it would be to omit (/?) this method of publication, giving no alternative, but requiring simple registration, and thus meeting the suggestions of an eminent jurist that in this particular the statute requires amendment to make it more effectual. But the statute must be construed with reasonably close adherence to the language used, (i) (7() See Wcttlnufer v. iScott. 20 O. X. R. at p. 656. (j) Hagarty. C.-I.C, in Wcttlaiifcr v. ,Si-j*t, 2ll U. A. R. at p. 654. SECTION ONE. (jT Ten days from the execution of any instrument under the Act is allowed for registration. (;) Hence, though the statute insists that when the name is placed on, or at- tached to the instrument, it must be done at the time when possession is givm to the bailee; yet, if it l)e not so done, no advantage thereof can be taken until the expiration of ten days, within which period the alternative of registration may be complied with. (15a) The exact name must be on the article sold. Any- thing short of this is insulficient, even though intending pur- chasers be not misled. For instance, if the corporate name of a vendor is " The 3Iason and Risch Piano Company, Limited,' the use of the words " Mason & Eiseh " is not a compliance with the provisions of this section, (y^) " The Legislature does not permit of the Court holding that any- thing other than tiiat wliich it has prescribed as necessary, shall be a compliance with the statute, even though what is done is in the opinion of the Court as effective for the end which the Legislature intended to attain as that wiiicli it has required to be done to protect the common law rights of the owner of the chattel." (y-) It follows then, that, if words are added to the correct name, which negative the fact that the person so named is the manufacturer, bailor or vendor, the Act is still not complied with. Suppose, for instance, after the name on the article, follows the word ' Agent," so that the inscription indicates that the person so named is agent, then by parity of reason, the inscription is insufficient. It is, however, sug'gested that with the surname of the vendor initials alone of the Christian name would be quite sufficient, for example: J. A. Brown instead of James Andrew Brown. The former inscription would be suflBcient. (j^) (16) See preceding note and aide note (!■) and (S). (17) See unie note (11), (12) and (13). (18) See a /lie note (11), (12) and (13). U) Section 2, punt. p. 72. (;■' ) Mason \. Lindsay, L, R. 4 Ont. y(>"i. (p) Meredith, C-.T.. Mascm \. Lindsay. sui>ra. {)'■) Mason r. Lindsay, L. R. 4 Ont. at p. 372. 68 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. (19) The statute insists that as against jDurcliasers, mort- gagees, etc., the transaction be reduced to writing. Should the article sold have upon it the name of the vendor, as re- quired by the statute, then there remains no legal necessity for registration under section 2, post, but none the less the transaction must be -reduced to writing; and, though sec- tion 2 substitutes an alternative for the present clause, when the present clause is not complied with, yet to perform the alternative this clause must be observed, so far at least as reducing the terms of the bailment to writing. The word "writing" includes words printed, painted, en- graved, lithographed, photographed, phonographed, and otherwise traced or copied, (fc) No specified or particular form of writing is required, and though the instrument be far from technical in form, yet if, from its entirety, it can be gathered that the possession of the chattel is passed from one to another, while the ownership is to remain in the bailor until paid for by the bailee, the instrument will be a writing within the Act. It need not be witnessed, for the statute does not say so, and if witnessed, it need not be attested. (I) It often has been the practice in selling an article, for the vendor to take a note therefor, and in the margin of the note or underneath it to have printed words to the effect " that the title in the j)roperty for which this note is given shall not pass until the note be paid." It is questionable if such a writing would be sufBeient, because the statute requires the writing, to be signed by the vendee, and the signature to the note might be said not to be a signature attached to memorandum, and such an instrument, we have seen, is not a promissory note, (m) (It,) R. S. O. 1897, cap. 1, sec. 8, sub-sec. 14. (I) Armstrong v. Ausman^ 11 U. C. Q. B. 498: see Bryan v. White, 2 Robertson .j17, wherein it appears that the word " attesta- tion " means " being present and seeing the execution." See also Brodie v. Ruttan, 16 U. C. Q. B. 207 : Sharpe v. Birch. L. R. Q. B. D. Ill : Ford v. Kettle, L. R. 9 Q. B. D. 139. (m) Dominion Bank v. Higgins, 21 Ont. A. R. 27."). SECTION ONE. (jy (20) Signing consists in the subscription bj' one himself of his name in writing, or by his agent. So long as the sig- nature is that of the bailee, it matters not on what portion of the instrument it appears, so long as it can be identified therewith and proved to be appropriated by the party to the recognition of the contract, and a very material and operative part of it. («.) In fact, an instrument under the Act be- ginning I, A. B., agree, etc., etc., has been held to be a suffi- cient signing, provided the instrument be in the handwriting of the person sought to be charged, (o) but the danger from such a signing arises from the difficulty, as a matter of law, in saying that it necessarily authenticates and governs every material and operative part of the instrument, (p) A dif- ferent result may happen when the document, so soon as authenticated by the signature of the party, ceases to be " a mere private privilege, but a matter of public concern." {q] The word " signed " before the bailee's name raises no pre- sumption that the document is not an original, (r) If a man cannot write, he may make his mark, (s) In fact it has been intimated that a mark was a good signature, even if the party, signing was able to write his name, (t) The sig- nature is also good, when the pen is guided by an amanuen- sis, the person intending to sign merely touching the top of the penholder, (u) It is desirable that the signature, and of course the in- strument, be written in ink, simply as a matter of perma- nence and security, but, if in pencil, it is none the less legal on that account. " There is no authority for saying that, (n) Hunt V. Adams, 5 Mass. 359 : Clason v. Bailey, 14 Johns 484; Schmidt v. Schmaeltc-i; 45 Mo. 502; Toms v. Cuming. 7 ^M. & G. 88; Regina v. Justices of Kent, L. R. 8 Q. B. 305. (o) Taylor v. Dobbins, 1 Strange 399: Saiiiultrson v. Jackson, 2 Bos. and P. 238 : Chitty, Jr., on Bills 10. (p) Hubert v. Treherne, 3 M. & G. 704. (g) Proudfoot v. Barnes, L. E. 2 C. P. 88, 94: Re Simpson & County Judge of Lanark, 9 Prac. R. 358. (r) Becker v. Woods, 16 0. P. 29. (,s) George v. Surrey, 1 M. & M. 516: E. C. L. R. vol. 22. (t) Baker v. Denning, 8 Ad, & E. 94: see Harrison v. Elving, 3 Q. B. 117. (m) Helshaw \. hangleij. 11 L. J. Ch. 17. 70 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. ■when the law requires a contract to be in writing, that the writing must he in ink. There is not any great danger that our decision will induce individuals to adopt the mode of writing by pencil in preference to that in general use. The imperfection of this mode of writing, its liability to obliteration, and the impossibility of proving it when so obliterated, will prevent its being generally adopted." (v) If the name be printed, it is sufficient, but in such case the name cannot prove itself. Adoption by the party as his sig- nature is necessary to be proved, (w) Any hieroglyphic, thoiigh perhaps not a flourish, will be sufficient, provided such be adopted by the signer as his sig- nature, but while the full name need not be written, at least the surname should appear. The initials, however, have been held to be sufficient; (x) though there is some doubt as to this, (y) unless the initials are intended as a signature by the party who writes them, (z) The objection to a mark, initials, or anything short of the written name, is not to its sufficiency as a signature, but to the difficulty occasioned when seeking to establish the writing as the signature of the party sought to be charged. Whatever is written or marked must be with the intention of denoting a signature, (a) Therefore a description of a person is not a signature, as, e.g., where one subscribes a letter to a relative with the rela- tionship of the writer as your affectionate mother without more. (&) (21) The Act gives no information as to how the agent is to be appointed. There is nothing in the Act that makes (l-J Abbott, C..J., Geary v. Physic, 5 B. & C. 234, E. C. L. R. vol. 11: 7 Dow. & R., 653 S. C. : Jeffery v. Walton. 1 Stark 2(;T. E. C. L. R. vol. 2 : Rhymes v. Clarkson, 1 Phil. 22 : Green v. Shipworth, 1 Phil. 53: Dickenson v. Dickenson, 2 Phil. 173. (w) Schneider v. Norris, 2 51. & S. 2.8li : Broivii v. Butchers Bank, 6 Hill 443. (a?) Merchants Baiitk v. Spiccr. G Wend. 443: Palmer v. Stephens. 1 Denio, 471. (y) Benjamin on Sales, 4th Am. od. 2S0. («•) See remarks of Lord Westbury in Caton v. Caton, L. R. 2 H. L. 127, 143: Chichester v. Co^i. 14 L. T. (X.S.) 433: Leyden's Vendor and Purchaser, 144. ed. 1862. (ft) Hulert V. j\Jorcaii, 2 O. & P. 12 Moore C. I'. 216. (&) Sellii V. Scllii. 3 Mer. 2. SECTION ONE. 71 a personal signature necessary. The appointment may be a verbal one, or it may be by subsequent ratification, as well as by antecedent delegation of authority, (c) qui facit per alium facU per se, but when it is by subsequent ratification, the principal must be in existence at the time of the making of the contract, because when no principal is in existence at the date of the contract, there can be no contract so far as he is concerned, and in such a case the agent is personally liable, (d) The authority to the agent may be an express authority. If it is authority to execute a document under seal, then the authority must be under seal. An instrument under this Act is not required to be under seal, hence there need not be any seal to the agent's authority. In fact it need not be even in writing, and if it be in writing no particular form of writing is necessary. There may be an implied authority. If a principal stands by and concurs expressly or tacitly in the act of the agent he is bound by it. Implied authority, then, can arise in many ways. It can arise in the course of, business or from em- ployment, or from repeated recognitions hv the principal of the agent's authority. Almost any one may be an agent. Even one who is himself unable to make a contract, can act as agent, but probably not one who actually lacks capacity, or who has not the mental power or discretion to consent. («) "As this agency is a mere ministerial office, infants, a feme covert, persons at- tainted, outlawed, excommunicated, aliens and others, though incapable of contracting on their own account, so as to bind themselves, may be agents for these purposes, (f) The bailee or vendee under the Act cannot be the ageni of the bailor or vendor, (g) (e) Maclean v. Dunn, 4 Bing. 722: (joshell \. Archer, 2 Ad. & B. .500. (d) Kelner v. Baxter, L. R. 2 C. P. 174: Scott v. Lord Eburij, L. R. 2 C. P. 255. (e) Daniel on Neg. Insts. 229. (/) Chitty on Bills, 13 Am. ed. (28) 36, (g) Shorman v. Brandt, Ex. Ch. L. R. 6 A. E. 920. 7-2 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. And an agent authorized to sell to one designated person a chattel of which he is given possession is not an agent to sell it to another. In such a case, the agent is simply a special agent, whose agency is terminated the moment the , sale to the. person named failed to be made. Such an agent is not an agent entrusted with the possession of goods under the Factor's Act. (h) Nor, under that Act, does the town agent include a mere servant or caretaker, or one who has possession of goods for carriage, safe custody or otherwise as an independent contracting party, but rather to one " whose employment corresponds to that of some Iniown kind of com- mercial agent like that class (factors) from which the Act has taken its name, (i)to one, who is of that class which like factors . . have a business which, when carried to its legitimate result, would properly end in selling or receiving payment for goods. That would be a kind of class; factors, and agents in the class of factors. If such a person is en- trusted, and is entrusted in that capacity, then, in the ab- sence of bad faith on the part of the pledgee, the pledge is good." (;•) 2. The preceding section shall not apply to household furniture (1) other than pianos, organs, or other musical instruments (2) nor shall it apply to any chattels mentioned in any such receipt, note, hire receipt, order, or other instrument (3) where the manufacturer, bailor or vendor, within ten days from the execution (4) of the receipt note, hire receipt, order or other instrument evidencing the bailment or conditional sale given to secure the purchase money, or a part thereof (4(7) shall file (5) with the clerk of the County Court of the county in which the bailee or conditional purchaser resided at the time of the bailment or conditional purchase (6) a copy (7) of the said receipt note, hire receipt, order or other instrument evidenc- ing the bailment or conditional sale. 2a. (8) Receipt notes, hire receipts and other chattels' (8a). siven by (9) bailees (10) of chattels other than manufactured (11) goods and chattels, where the condition (12) of the bailment (13) is such that the possession of the chattel passes (14) without any ownership therein being acquired (15) by the bailee until the (ft) R. S. 0. cap. I.jO, sec. 2: Bush v. /■');/. 15 Ont. R. 122. (i) Willes, J. Hetyman v. Heul-er. 13 C. B. N. S. at p. 527-8: Citii Bank v. Barrow. 5 App. Cases 664. if) Gale- V. yorth We.itcni Banl:. L. R. 9 C. P. 470. ]0 C. P. 354. SECTION TWO. 73 payment ot the purchase or consideration money, or some stipulated part thereof (16), shall only be valid as against (17) subsequent purchasers or mortgagees without notice in good faith (18) for valu- able consideration (19), provided that the bailor or vendor (20) within ten days from .the execution (21) of the receipt note, hire receipt order, or other instrument evidencing tlie bailment or con- ditional sale given to secure the purchase money, or a part thereof (22), shall file (2.S) with the Clerk of the County Court of the County in which the bailee or conditional purchaser resided at the time of the bailment or conditional purchase (24), a copy (25) of the said receipt note, hire receipt or order, or other instrument evidencing the bailment or conditional sale, and no such bailment shall, be valid as against such subsequent purchaser or mortgagee as aforesaid, un- less it is evidenced in writing signed by the bailee or his agent (26). (1) What is comprised in the term household furniture? We are told by this section that pianos, organs, and other musical instruments are not included in the term, but apart from this statutory definition as to what is not household furniture, it becomes no easy matter to define exactly what is household furniture. The term has been said to comprise everything that contributes to the use and convenience of the householder, even ornaments of the house, (k) according to the station in life of the person enjoying them, (T) and yet whether one regards the ordinary use of language or the technicalities of the law relating to fixtures, su.ch articles as fixtures do not pass under the word "furniture," (m) and certainly fixtures are an essential contribution to the use and convenience of a householder, but the intention as to fixtures decides their character; (n) and according as the intention is, or the special circumstances are, so may fixtures be, or not be comprised within the term "household furniture," (o) (Jc) Kelley v. Powlet. Amb. 605 : see Patau v. Sheppard, 10 Sim. 192. (?) Allen V. Wallace, 21 N. S. R. 49, 53: Kirbij y. Clapp, 15 App. Div. (X.Y.) 37. (m) Finney v. Grice, L. R, 10 Ch. D. 13. ( n ) See post section 10, p. 121 : Lancaster v. Eve, 5 C. B. N. S. : see L. R. 14 Ch. D. 379 : Smith y. Wagoner. 50 Wis. Ir,', ; Godard V. Gould, 14 Barb. (N.Y.) 662: Gooding v. Rileii. 50 M. H. 400: Doran v. Willard, 14 N. B. R. 358 : Alexander \. Corvil. If) N. B R. 599. (o) Finney v. Grice, supra. 74 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. but as a general rule fixtures are not comprised within the term "furniture" (idem). "Fixed furniture," though in a sense fixed, as \vhere glasses are fastened by nails, and the l)Ook cases by screws, are not fixtures but furniture, (p) Ky reason, however, of the amendment to the statuta which follows as section 2a immediately after section 2 (6 Edw. YIl cap. 19, sec. 2:5), which, however, does not come into force until the 1st January, 1907, household furniture no longer is excluded from the operation of the Act. It cannot escape notice that the amendments referred to have been eareless^ly pitched into the Act, withovit a.py regard to their effect on portions of the Act left untouched. For example: take this very section. Now section 2 declares that the Act shall not apply to household furniture. This section has in no way been altered. Tt therefore stands. But another section, namely, section 2a, by making the Act cover all chattels, declares that the .\ct shall apply to household furniture. Of course there is no question as to what is the legal result; the only question is one for com- ment on the pitch and toss method of amending our laws. (2) For forms relating thereto see appendix. (3) See ante, section one, note (3), p. J. (4) In computing the period of ten days, the first day, or the day of execution of the instrument, is excluded, (q) so that if an instrument is executed on the first da}' of the month, the instrument is duly filed if filed on or before the eleventh day of the same month, unless that day falls on a Sunday, when it may be filed on the next day following ^'hich is not a holiday. (;•) But if a Sunday or a holiday is one of the intervening days, 'then such Sunday or holiday counts as one day. (s) (p) Birch V. Dtnrxon. 2 A. & E. 3T. ((/) McLean v. I'iidsioii. 7 A. R. Ji)2. (r) R. S. O. cap. 1. sec. 8, snb-secs. lU and IT: McLean \. Piiil-cr- lo)i, 7 A. R., ceased to be the law, when this statute was enacted. and this statute, or rather the original of it, was passed in conse- quence of the decision in McLean v. I'iiil.-erluii. (s) :ifcLcnii \. Pinlcrrtoii. 7 A. R. 492. SECTION TWO. 75 The time from which the ten days is to be computed is not necessarily the date of the instrument, but the date of the execution. The presumption is. that the execution was upon the day of the date of the instrument, but this can be re- butted, for after all it may only be the nominal date, and then it is immaterial; (t) and it would seem that it is not necessary that the writing evidencing the bailment should be completed by its execution within any particular time of the date of the actual sale, (t^) The date of a deed or in- strument, generally means the time ^vhen the deed was really made or delivered, not always the day that may have been inserted in the deed, which sometimes may be an im- possible day. (u) Parol evidence is admissible to shew that a mistake was made in the insertion of the date, (v) A purchaser or mortgagee finding an instrument under the statute registered more than ten days after the date, must not take it for granted that therefore the instrument is void. He is affected with notice, if the fact be, that the mortgage was filed within the period fixed by the statute, because he is presumed to know the law, and to know that the date of the instrument may not, after all, be the date of its execution, (w) When asserting any rights under a mortgage it is incumbent on the mortgagee to prove its val- idit)' as to filing, and though the statute relating to chattel mortgages makes the clerk's certificate evidence of registra- tion, it is only prima facie so. and therefore evidence can be gone into, to shew when the mortgage was left in the clerk's office, for at such time mortgages are considered as filed. (,r) (f) McDonald v. Gaunt, 30 Ont. R. 398: McLemi v. Pivh-erfon, supra : Pingrey on Chattel Mortgages, sec 140. (f-) Idem. (ii) Rcvlmun r. Jarvi.s. 3 TT. C. Q, B. 280: 2 Bla. Com. (y) Shaughnessey v. Leiris. 1.30 JIass, 35.5: Stonchrrtikcr \. Kerr. 40 Ind. ISO: Hoadley, 48 Ind. 452: Holman v. Dornn. 5(5 Ind. ,358. (ir) Stonelrenh-cr >'. Kerr, supra: ilr-Ttoiinld , Gaunt 30 Ont R 398. (x) .Toneis on Mortgages. 2ncl ed., 199, 76 UON'UrJ'lO.VAL SALES ACT. (4 a) These words clearly indicate that the instruments aimed at by the Act;, are only such as cover an actual sale, (y) (5) Upon receipt of any instrument under the Act, pre- sented to him for that purpose, the clerk shall file the same. It has been held that filing consists in simply handing the instrument to the proper officer; (z) but the meaning of the word " file/' at common law, namely, " a thread, string, or wire, upon which writs and other exhibits in courts and offices are fastened or filed for the more safe keeping, and ready turning of the same," (a) would indicate that the present statutory use of the word was correct. The simple leaving of a mortgage with the clerk, does not necessarily constitute filing. Should the clerk receive it with instruc- tions not to register it for a few days, there is no filing within the statute, at least until further orders are received concerning the instrument; (&) and the fact of the clerk acting contrary to his instructions, and endorsing thereon the time of filing, or of its receipt by him, will not create a filing within the statute, (c) (6) The instruments mentioned above are to be filed in the office of the clerk of the county court, or union of coun- ties, a? the case may be, where the purchaser resides at the time of the execution of the instrument; and, if this is done, registration need not be afterwards had in another county, to which he afterwards removes, (d) It formerly was the law in relation to bills of sale and chattel mortgages that registration should take place in the county wherein the mortgagee or bargainee resided, and not in the county where- in were the goods, except in the event of the bargainor resid- ing out of Ontario. (y) See Mason v. Lindsay, L. R. 4 Ont. at p. 376. (s) Graham v. Summers, 25 Minn. 81. (o) Whart. Law Lex, (&) Low V. Pettergill, 12 N. H. 337: see Ross v. Hamilton, E. T. 3 Vic: Foster v. Smith, 1:1 U. C. R. 243: In re Ross. 3 Prac. R. 394: B. of M. v. Mnnro. 23 U. C. R. 414: Kerr v. Lunitlcv, 15 C. P. 531 : T. d- L. Co. v. G-uthhert, 13 Grant 412. (c) 2'oivn V. Orifflth, 17 N. H. 165: Parker v. Palmer, 13 R. I. 349. (d) Banington v. Skinner, 117 N. Car. 47. SECTION TWO. 77 Information can be more speedily acquired by examining the records in a county wherein a man resides or was residing at the time of the filing, than could the necessary information be acquired by being compelled to know where goods were at a certain period of time at which place a search would require to be made. For this reason it is submitted that the amendment made by the later legislation (e) will not be found to be an improvement, and the law of this statute will be found to be preferable. Under no circumstances is the instrument to be filed in the county where the goods are if different from the county wherein the purchaser resides. («^) Should such be done the transaction will be invalid as against the parties protected by the Act. In the event of a removal of the chattel from the Province of Ontario to another Province of the Dominion, the written agreement between the parties, if valid, will still be held to be good, for the lex loci contractus controls the nature, con- struction and validity of the contract as contra- distinguished from real property contracts, the law of which is the lex loci rei sitae, (f) If the contract is valid in the Province where- in it is made, it is valid everywhere, unless it is contra ionos mores, or is one for the doing of something which is strictly forbidden by the country wherein that something is to be done; and when made in one Province and the chattels are afterwards removed to another Province, the contract will hold the goods in the latter Province if it complies in all respects with the laws in the former Province, (g) The place where the instrument must be filed is the place where the sendee resides at the time of the purchase, (h) (e) 43 Vic. cap. 15, sec. 1. (e^) Cohen v. Chandler, 79 Ga. 427: Bond v. Brewer, 96 Ga. 443. (/) Peninsular Steam Nav. Go. v, Shand, 3 Moo. P. C. N. S. 272: River Stave Co. v. Sill, 12 Ont. R. 557: Marthinson v Patter- son, 10 Ont. App. 188. (g) River Stave Co. v. Sill, supra : Singer v. MacLeod, 20 N. S. It. 341: Golin v. Dunbar, 32 N. B. R. 325: Bunin v. Robertson, 1 N. W. T. Rep. 89 : Bope v. Hope, 8 D. M. & G. 731, 26 L. J. Ch. 417. (h) Reynold v. Case, 60 Mich. 76. 78 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. Filing in the wrong county cannot charge notice, (i) It may be asked then where does a man reside, or what is "residence" or "domicile." Supposing that at the time of the purchase the vendee was actually in the act of moving from one place to another, and was in fact on his journey tt) his new home, but had not removed all his furniture and effects. In such a case, not improbable, yet not likely, hi> domicile or residence is at that place from whence he is mov- ing, because a new domicile is not acquired merely by inten- tion but by the actual possession of a new domicile, giving evidence of habitation or occupation, (j) Thus, it will be seen, intention alone is not the only element in domicile. There is another, namely, residence, and both must concur to give domicile. The change must be animo et de facto. Eesiding in a place without the intention of remaining will not give a man a domicile, nor will the intention to change residence without actual possession give him a new domicile. (k) It may be necessary to note that while frequently used in the same sense, the terms " domicile " and " residence " differ in signification. Thus a residence of one country may go to another country with the intention of residing there for the purpose of trading, and he may be a resident of the latter country, but he does not thereby become domiciled, because domicile imports an abiding and permanent home, and not a mere temporary one, (/) although it is not techni- cally necessary that a person should form the intention of never moving away, (m) Kindersley, V.-C, in Lord v. Vol- vin {n.) says : " I would venture the opinion that in residence (i) Bother v. Biiswell, 51 Me. 601. {)) Brodru v, Bissonette, Q.R. 13 S. C. 271. (k) Sharpe v. Crispin, L. R. 1 P. & D. 611: King v. Foxwell, 3 Gh. Div. 518; Douglas v. DoiigJiix. Ij, R. 12 Eq. G17 : Stevenson v. Masson. L. R. 17 Eq. 78: In re Grove, 40 Ch. Div. 216: Stevens V. Fish, Cassells' Digest S. C. decisions 235. (I) King v. Foxwell, 3 Ch. D. 518: In re Grove, 40 Ch. Div. 216. (y;0 Whitney v. Shiihoon, 12 Alleu (Mass.) Ill: Silroy v. Lindsay, 42 Hun. (N.y.) 116; Sturgeon v. Korte, 34 Ohio St. 525. (m) Kindersley, V.C, in Loir v. Colrin, 4 Drew 376, 28 L. J. Ch. 306. SECTION TWO. 79 tlieve must he tbe animus resiclendi; (o) but there need not be, as in domicile, the abiding and permanent home with actual possession thereof, for residence does not imply that the owner of the property must personally live thereon, for residence is quite compatible with much absence from it." (p) Then the word '"' residence " is an ambiguous word, and may receive a different meaning according to the position in which it is found, or the statute in which it is used; (q) and, because of its elasticity, admit- ting, as it does, of restriction or expansion to suit the subject matter to which it has reference, its interpretation cannot be given in one set rule, but must depend upon the subject matter in which it is used, and be restricted to the fitness of that matter. (?■) Thus the Consolidated Eules of Practice for Ontario (s) in their use of the words '" domiciled or ordi- narily resident." have to be interpreted with regard to the extra-territorial jurisdiction of the High Court of Justice for the Province, (t) For example, an agent resident in Detroit, of a joint stock company eafrying on business in Ontario, with its head ofSce at Woodstock, where his wife :ind family resided, who visits them once a fortnight and sometimes once a month, but not, as a rule, for more than a day and a half, must be held to reside in Ontario under Rule 1198 (a), (i^) The "residence" of a grantor, or an at- testing witness under the Imperial Bills of Sale Act, may be where he sleeps, but it is said to be more proper to state the place where he is chiefly to be found, namely, his place of business, or his master's place of business, where he per- (0) Whithorn v. Thomas, 7 M. & Gr. 1. (2)) Warner v. Moir, 53 L. J. Ch. 474: 2."> Ch. D. 00."): but see Walcot V. Botfield, Kay 534: Wescomjfs Case, L. R. 4 Q. B. 110: Taylor v. St. Mary Abbott, L. R. 5 C. P. 309. (g) Per Erie, C..T., Nasff v. Mutter, 31 L. J. C. P. 359: per Cotton, L.J., Re Bowie, ex p. Brewll, 50 L. J. Ch. 384: ib. Ch. D. 484. (r) Bac. Max. 10. is) Rule lUZ. c. (.1) NesMt v. Oalna (3902), 3 O. L. R. 429: Allen v. Allen. 15 Ont. Prac. R. 463: i?ee Harrison v. Harrison, 20 Ala. 629: Eerl v- Kcrl. 34 Md. 21 : tHi/iiey v. Rigney, 127 N. Y. 408. («') Mo^at V. Leonard, L. R. 6 Ont. 383. 80 CONOri'IONAL SALES ACT. forir.s his ordinary duties; (u) but, where there is nothing to shew by the contextj that it is used in a more extensive sense, the word " residence " then denotes " the place where an individual eats, drinks and sleeps, or where his family or his servants eat, drink and sleep." (v). A person's place of business may be his residence, (w) and may indeed be prima facie evidence of his residence within the English Com. L. P. Act of 1852; (a;) and a person may have more than one residence, (y) Lord Coke says: "If a man dwelleth in a forrayne shire, riding, city, or town corporate, and keepeth a house and servants in another shire, riding, city or town corporate, he is an inhabitant in each." {z) His having an establishment in one place, does not prevent his also residing in another: (a) and absence from that other, no matter how long, if there be the liberty of returning at any time, and there has been no abandonment of the intention to return, whenever it may suit the party's pleasure or convenience so to do, will not prevent a constructive legal residence at such other place. ('&) Under the Act in question, the case may often arise whether the vendee's "residence" is where his family eat, drink and sleep, or where he himself carries on business. The very nature of some businesses — the sawmill business for example — is such that the business must often be carried on elsewhere than that place wherein the family eat, drink and sleep. And, perhaps, the sawmill business, as much as any other business, employs machinery or manufactured chattels within the operation of the Act. It is easy for any one of («) Per Pollock, C.B., Attenhorough v. Thompson, 27 L. J. Ex. ■23 : 2. H. & N. 559. (c) Per Bayley, J., R. v. Nath Gurry, 4 B. & C. 599. {w) AUett V. Basham, 25 L. J. Q. B. 239 : 5 E. & B. 1019 -.Yardley V. Jones, 4 Dowl. 45. (x) ' Naef V. Mutter, 31 L. J. C. P. 357. (y) Greenham v. Child, 59 L. J. Q. B. 27 : in Re Moulson : Ex p. Knightly, 51 L. J. Ch. 823. (~) 2 Coke's Inst. 702. (a) Whithorn v. Thomas, 7 M. & G. 1, B. C. L. R. Vol. 49. (6) Potcell V. Guest, 18 C. B. ( N. S.) 72. 80: E. C. L. R. vol. 114, 31 L. J. (C.P.) 69, 70. SECTION TWO. 81 experience to recollect many instances of business men resid- ing at their place of business, whose families reside else- where, and cases of this kind make the matter of double residence one of some importance under the Act, for the question arises, in which county should, the instrument of sale be filed. Once it is found the vendee has two residences, then there is no difficulty in deciding where to file the in- strument, because if it is filed in either county, the Act will be met; though it can scarcely be questioned that the filing should be in that county in which the article sold is used by the vendee and can at any time be seen, provided of course the vendee resides there too. But the place of filing has in business dealing to be decided upon, while the place of resi- dence may be a doubtful matter of opinion, for the vendee's place of business may fix the residence to the exclusion of the far-off residence of the family, and particularly so, if the article is in use at such place of business. The opinion is ventured that this should be so. (c) A company within the •Act, of course, resides where its head office is; (d) but see Eeynsham Linen Co. v. Baker, (e) and Baillie y. Goodwin, (/) where the place of manufacture and sale is said to be the residence or place where the company " dwells and carrys on business," which may not be where the head office is. (7) Eegistration, in compliance with the Act, is for the purpose of notice. An unauthorized registration is not no- tice, any more than registration of an instrument not exe-; cuted according to the statute, {f). An instrument prop- erly registered within the period of ten days limited* by this section, relates back, operates and takes effect upon, from and after the day of its execution, and (C) Ahlett /. Bashain. 2S L. J. Q. B. 239: Yurdley v. Jones, i- Dowl. 45. (d) Jones v. ScotiUh Ace. Tnsce. Co.. 55 L. J. Q. B. 415, 17 Q. B. D. 421 : Taylor v. Crowland Gas Co., 24 L. J. Ex. 23.3. (e) 33 L. J. Ex. 41: 2 H. & C. 729. (/) 33 Ch. D. COS. (f) Fairbanks v. Eurel;a Co., C7 Ala. 109: Kimlall v. WeUon, SO Wis. 133. B.C. —I'l 82 CONDII'IONAL SALES ACT. is notice from that day. If registered within the period of ten days, then; inasmucli as it relates back to its date, or rather to its day of execution, it will take prece- dence over instruments subsequently executed, although first filed ; but if it is filed after the time limited it loses its retro- spective effect and a subsequent bona fide mortgagee or pur- chaser, will have priority whether the subsequent transaction be in writing and filed or not. The statute, it will be ob- served, does not govern the subsequent transaction except that it shall be in good faith. If it did the result would be different, (g) It has been held, under somewhat similar statutes, that an instrument governed by the Act if filed after the specified period will be notice from the time it is filed, and be a protection against incumbrances made subsequently to such filing. The ruling is, it is said, deduced from the spirit and purpose of Acts in being notice to the public. But it will be found that decisions to this effect generally follow from a statute giving eifect to such legislation. The Act in question is in derogation of the common law, which imposed no such restrictions upon the disposing of property as the Act contains, and therefore the Act must be construed strictly, (h) The function of those, whose duty it is to con- strue Acts of parliament, is " not to say what the Legislature meant, but to ascertain what the Legislature has said that it meant." (i) And in this Act it has said that the sale shall only be valid on certain conditions being performed, and if these conditions are not performed, then clearly all parties concerned are as if the statute had never been passed. In order to file an instrument under the Act it must be taken to the office of the clerk and there left with him. Going to his office after office hours, and the clerk not being there, and then, in the evening taking it to the clerk and giving it to him at his residence, does not make the filing good as of (g) Fleschnci- v. Hiimtcr, 12 Oregon, 161: Sonde v. Morrow, 33 Pa. St. 83. (7i) Hoyt V. Hoyt, 8 Bosw. (N. Y.) 524: Blasoti v. Lindsaii. L. R. 4 Out. 365. ( /) Per Wathews. .T.. in Rofhxrhiltl v. Ciiiiiiiiiixionn.^ nf Inhiud h'cvcnuc (1894), 2 Q. K. fit p. U."). SECTION TWO. 83 the time of the visit to the office. (;) The office hours of the clerk of the County Court are from 10 in the forenoon until 4 o'clock in the afternoon, except upon legal holidays or other special days appointed by an Act of the Legislature, (fc) The clerk then cannot by filing a document after hours give priority to a person -who may present it after four o'clock in the afternoon and before 10 o'clock the next morning. The clerk's duties are ministerial and limited to the hours fixed by statute. The public are bound to have knowledge of these hours, and he who acts upon the knowledge is not to be prejudiced by the clerk in favour of one who thus tries to get an advantage. The rule of Court on the subject (l) is directory only, and for the guidance of the officials only, and does not prevent them from keeping their offices open to a later hour than 4 o'clock in the afternooii, if they see fit to do so, or the business of the office requires it. (m) But that cannot be for the purpose of doing an act in favor of one as against another who, relying upon the statute, believes the recording office is closed, as the statute says so. Custom and convenience has established the practice of instruments within the Act being sent to the proper officer by means of the mail. In such cases, it may be that the sender creates the clerk his agent for the purposes of filing the document, and it will be filed so soon as the clerk reaches his office and there accepts it; but, if the clerk receives it from the post after hours, he cannot then file it to the prejudice of another, any more than the party himself could do so. At best the receipt by the clerk after hours would make the filing good as of 10 o'clock the next morning, but it would raise a nice question if another instrument was presented to the clerk to be filed on the stroke of the clock the next morning when the office is legally opened. As against this view it might be urged that the time for performing the act of (;•) Hooseleij v. Gurth, 2 Gratt (Va.) 471: 44 Am. Dec. 393. (Jc) R. S. O. cap. 55, s. 8, (0 Cou. Rule 9. (m) Mvii- V. McXeill, Re N. Bruce Election, 27 0. L. J. 538: 11 C. L. Times 265. 84 CONDITIONAL SAF.ES ACT. filing, is given as so many days, and a day is 24 hours stan- dard time, («) and so the filing must be good if done at any hour of the day within the number of days fixed by statute, provided the document is left at the proper office, (o) The clerk, as has been said, is a ministerial officer, (p) and there- fore he may appoint a deputy to act in his stead, (q) and may record instruments to vrhich he himself is a party, (r) The filing, in fact, will be good if the instrument is left with any person who is actually discharging the duties of the office, whether already appointed deputy or not, or having charge during a vacancy in the office, (s) (8) This section does not become law until 1st January, 1907. (8a) See ante p. 1, note (1) also page 4, note, (2); also page 11, note (3). It must now be remembered that the effect of this section, placed here by the Statute Law Amendment Act (6 Edw. VII. cap. 19, sec. 23) is to extend the entire Act, so that it now includes all chattels in its operation. Whatever is a chattel comes within the purview of the Act, provided the chattel at the time of the sale is capable of being passed out of the possession of the vendor into that of the vendee. The very essence of the Act is that possession changes, but not the property, hence, if the chattel is of such a character that makes change of posses- sion impossible, then to such a chattel the statute does not apply^. Somfe confusion may arise hereafter, as did arise in Miles V. Ankatell ^ on the moot question whether the chattel be capable of being moved from the possession of one to that of another. , The tests for determining this are stated in the Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, 1st ed., vol. 8, p. 43, but (re) R. S. O. cap. 144, s. 1. (o) Lloyd V. Ward, 13 I'rac. R. 238. (p) Lloyd V. Ward, supra. (g) Dodge v. Potter, 18 Barb. (N.Y.) 193. (r) Brookenborotigh v. Motion, 55 Tex. 493 : see Queen City Refin- ing Co., 10 Prac. R. 415. (s) Cook V. Hall, 6 111. .575: Bi.shop v. Cook. 13 Barb. (N. Y. i 320. ' Hamilton v. Harrison, 40 U. C. Q. B. 127. = 29 Ont. 21. SECTION TWO (a). 85 rules or tests, no matter how clear or comprehensive, do not always enable one to arrive at a conclusion in the particular case in hand; and it may be said that each case has to be determined largely upon its own facts. It must not be overlooked that while the statute is now extended in its scope to all chattels — that is to all chattels the possession of which has changed — a compliance with the amendment will not suffice in the case of manufactured chattels, as to which section one still governs. But here a nice question will arise. A table, a chair, or a sofa is a manufactured article; but the statute prior to the recent amendment excepted such from its operation, because such were household furniture, hence household furniture, though it is manufactured, is governed not by section one of the Act, but by the amending section, and therefore as to house- hold furniture, though such be manufactured, the vendor may not protect himself by placing his name upon it, as can be done in the case of other manufactured articles, a car- riage for example, but he must strictly comply with the amending section by filing the contract of sale within 10 days in the proper office. (9) See section one, footnote (4), p. 19. (10) See section one, footnote (5), p. 21. (11) See ante, footnote (8). (12) See section one, footnote (6), p. 21. (13) See section one, footnote (7), p. 23. (14) See section one, footnote (8), p. 39. (15) See section one, footnote (9), p. 40. (16) See section one, footnote (10), p. 47. (17) See section one, footnote (11), p. 51. (18) See section one, footnote (12), p. 53. (19) See section one, footnote (13), p. 64. (20) It is now to be observed that the proviso here pro- vided is only in favor of a bailor or vendor. In the pre- ceding section,^ the word "manufacturer" precedes the words " bailor or vendor," shewing that the present amend- " See page 72. 86 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. ment* is not intended to effect the' law as it hitherto ex- isted as regards manufacturers, but hits at the bailor or vendor of any article other than a manufactured article, such, for example, as a horse. The writer, in fact, is in a position to know that the amending legislation finds its origin in the sale of a horse by one who, while parting with the possession, reserved to himself the property in the ani- mal. Confusion, and perhaps injustice, resulted. The \'endee of the conditional vendee of the animal complained that, when he innocently purchased from one who had in him all the indicia of ownership, he should not be permitted to suffer as against the conditional vendor, who by his secret dealing with his vendee led to the mischief. There is much to be said in favor of legislating against the repetition of such results. The same mischievous effects, however, are constantly happening in business circles because the Bank- ing Act,° in the power it extends to banks of taking security receipts, makes no provision for the existence of siich re- ceipts being discovered by enquiry. (31) See section two, footnote (4), p. 73. (32) See section two, footnote (4a), p. 75. This section does not apply unless the instrument is one by which the person into whose possession the chattel passes agrees to become the purchaser of it, but the ownership of it is not to be acquired by him until he has paid the purchase or consid- eration money, or some stipulated part of it — in other words, unless he has bought or agreed to buy the chattel.'' (23) See section two, footnote (5), p. 75. (24) See section two, footnote (G), p. 75. (25) See section two, footnote (7), p. 80. (26) It must occur to most ordinary people that when the statute insists that the instrument evidencing the bailment or conditional sale, is to be filed, to then add that the instru- ment must be in writing is adding what is surplusage. How *G Edw. VII. c. 10, s. 23. «S. C. 73. ' Mason v. Lindsay, L. R. 4 Ont. 576. SECI'ION THKEE. 87 Is it possible, it may be aslied, to file the instrument evi- dencing the bailment unless it is in writing? And then to say it must be in writing is to justify the comment of a great judge who, speaking of this statute, says he con- strues this Act with some diffidence, " because of the excep- tionally faulty character of its draughting^ which renders it well-nigh impossible for any one to say, with any degree of certainty, what the language employed by the legislature to express its will really means." * 3. (1) When the bailee (1) or conditional purchaser (2) resides (3) at the time of the bailment or conditional purchase in an un- organized district (4), all instruments (5) may be filed with the Clerk of the Court with whom mortgages and sales of chattels are to be registered in such district (6), under the law at the time in force. (2) This section shall apply to instruments filed with the said oflicer prior to the 7th day of April, 1890. 53 Vic. c. 30, ss. ], 2. (1) See ante section 1, not (6). (2) The words conditional purchaser do not appear in the first section of the Act. They occur for the first time in the tenth line of section two {cvnte, p. 72), and are there used synonymously with the term bailee ; and as the " bailee "' there mentioned is the bailee mentioned in section one, there is no doubt tiiat the bailee mentioned in section one is con- trolled by the words " conditional purchaser " — a far more apt term for a vendee contemplated by the Act than the term bailee, which has a much wider significance. (3) See note to section 2, ante p. (4) See E. C. 0. cap. 109, p. 1072. (6) The use of the word " instruments" is to be observed. At first blush it would suggest the idea that the original in- strument itself is required to be filed, but this is not so, for it means instruments " under the Act," and elsewhere the provi- sions are for filing copies only (s^). (6) When the vendee resides within the District of Al- goma. Thunder Bay, or Nipissing, the instruments shall be filed in the office of the District Court Clerk in the district. 'Mason v. Lindsay, L. R. 4 Out. 376. («') See Harris v. Com. Bank, 16 U. C. Q. B. 437. 88 coxinrioNAL sales act. {s') If within Parry Sound, Muskoka or Eainy liiver, then in the office of the Clerk of the First Division Court of the District, (s^) The provisional county of Haliburton is not an unorganized district. Therefore so far as that county is concerned, instruments under this Act must be filed with the Clerk of the County Court of the county of Victoria, to which county Haliburton is attached for judicial" purposes. The special statute governing the filing of chattel mortgages, (s^) in Haliburton not applying to instruments under this Act, for the reason given. Should it happen that any of these dis- tricts hereafter emerge from a district into a regular county organization, then and from such time this section could have no application, and the instruments within the Act would thereafter be filed with the Clerk of the County Court in the then county. ♦ 4. The clerk of the court (1) on receipt of such copy shall (2) duly file the same and cause it to be properly entered in an index book to be kept for that purpose, and shall be entitled to charge ten cents (3) for every such filing and five cents for every search in respect thereof. A clerical error which does not mislead, or an error in an immaterial or non-essential part of the said copy so filed, shall not invalidate the said filing or destroy the effect thereof (5). (1) The clerk of the court of the county wherein the bailee or vendee resides. It has been held that, during a vacancy in the office of clerk, the filing is valid when per- formed by any person in charge of the office for the time being, (t). (2) Upon receipt of any instrument under the Act, pre- sented to him for that purpose, the clerk shall file the same. It has. been held that filing consists in simply handing the instrument to the proper officer to be filed and so accepted by the proper officer; (m) but the meaning of the word "file,"' at common law, namely, " a thread, string, or wire, upon (s=) R. S. O. cap. 148, s. 15 (2). (s=) R. S. O. cap. 148, s. 15 (2). (s') R. S. O. cap. 148, s. 15 (4). (<) Bishop v. Cook, 11 Barb. (N.Y.) 320. (u) Graham v. -. Hamilton. E. T. 3 A'ic. : Foster v. Smith, 13 U. C. E. 243 : In re Ross, 3 Prac. R. 394 : B. of J/. V. Munro, 23 U. C. R. 414 : Kerr v. Lundey, 15 C. P. 531 : T. d- L. Go. V. Cuthlert, 13 Grant 412. (x) Bowen v. Fassett, 37 Ark. 507. (y) Toicn v. Griffith. 17 N. H. 165: Parker v. Palmer. 13 R I. 3.50 (o) 35 La Ann. 153. (&) Lamson v. Falls, G Ind. 309 : 'White v. Union Bank, G La Ann 162. 90 CONDiriOXAL SALES ACT. demands of him. (c) A paper is filed when it is delivered to the proper officer, and by him received to be kept on file. The indorsement is but evidence of the filing, (d) though not of course the only evidence, and other testimony may be admitted to prove the fact, (e) It is to be observed, how- ever, that this statute makes no provision for an endorse- ment by the Clerk on the instrument itself, the proper entry in the index book being all that the statute demands. This entry would be the best evidence of the filing, (e^) Should the office of clerk be vacant, or the proper officer absent from illness or other cause, and a person who is in charge of the office receives a document to be filed, and properly enters it in the index book kept for the purpose, and places it among other documents in the office of the same kind, this is then a valid filing, (/) for delivery may be made to any person having charge of the office for the time being; (. 497 : Ex p. Thorm, L. R. 8 Ch. 722. (d) Powers v. State, 87 lud. 148: Peterson v. Teuylor, 15 Ga. 483. (e) Peterson v. Tuylor, 15 Ga. 483: Bettison v. Biidd. 21 Ark. 580. (c') Powers v. State, supra. (f) Bishop V. Cook, 13 Barb. (X.Y.) 329. (g) Oats V. Walls, 28 Ark. 244, (h) Dodge v. Potter, 18 Barb. (N.Y.) 193. (i) Lamson v. Falls, 6 Ind. 309, SECTION FIVE. 91 strument is not filed until the fee is paid ; but when the lee is payable to the clerk or officer for his own exclusive benefit, then the latter may waive his right to prepayment, and if this right is waived, the instrument is filed from the time it is put into the clerk's custody, though the fee may never be paid, (i) (4) See Emmott v. Marchant, L. E. 3 Q. B. D. 555. (5) The words "true copy" much less "copy" do not mean " exact copy." The misspelling of a name, or the omission of a letter, if a person seeking information is not misled, will not signify, (k) 5. The manufacturer, bailor or vendor shall leave a copy (1) of the receipt note, hire receipt, order or other instrument by which a lien <2) on the chattel is retained, or which provides for a conditional sale, with the bailee or conditional vendee at the time of the execution (3) of the instrument, or within twenty days thereafter. (4) (1) The copy need not be an exact copy ; clerical differences between it and the original do not prevent it being a copy. But the copy must be so true that nobody reading it could by any possibility.be misled, (a) (2) It is of course intended that the instruments here referred to are the same as those referred to in section one of the Act {aiite, p. 1); yet the instruments mentioned in sec- tion one do not retain in the manufacturer or vendor of the chattel any lien, while the instruments mentioned in this sec- tion are so defined. Lien is not the result of contract. It arises by implication of law, and it ceases to exist when pos- session of the article jjasses from him who would seek to enforce it, and the very essence of the transaction aimed at by this statute is the possession — the actual visible possession — ^being not in the vendor, but in the vendee. The essential element in lien is that it has reference to the property of (;■) Finders v. Yoger, 29 Iowa 468 : Tregamio v. Comandre Mill, etc., Co., 57 Cal. 501. (k) Gnrdufr v. Slmw, 24 L. J. (N. S.) 319; In re Bewer, ex parte Eahen, 21 Ch. D. 871. (o) In re Hewer, ex parte Kahen, 21 Ch. D. 871. 92 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. another, but in every transaction under the statute the pro- perty remains and must remain in the vendor, the person in whom by this section, the instruments therein mentioned, seek to retain the lien. The vendor cannot have a lien on his own property, and if the receipt note, hire receipt, order or other instrument mentioned in this section contains any- thing professing to grant him a lien, all words so intended are surplusage and must be excluded. (6) Might it not be, that a manufacturer, bailor, or vendor could say in excuse for non-compliance with this section — at least if it were not for the alternative portion of it — that inasmuch as he had no such instrument as mentioned, he could not well obey the section by having a copy of it as directed. The words "other instrument by which a lien," etc., on the principle of ejusdem generis embrace just such instru- ments as come within the definition of a receipt note, hire receipt or order for chattels, and the word " lien " here used, connected with the word " receipt note," might define the in- strument as a receipt note lien. While it is to be observed that the word "lien" does not appear in section one {ante), which is the governing section as to instruments within the Act, and is in fact the part of the statute covering the in- struments referred to in this section, it is not uncommon to find "lien notes" adopted by business men to signify their transactions. While such may be a note, they are not pro- missory notes, as is generally supposed, (c) because the ad- ditional provision thereon inscribed, that the title, ownership and property for which they were given should not pass from the payees until payment in full, and that if the notes were not paid at maturity the vendors might take possession of the chattel for which the notes were give^i, etc., etc., were matters unwarranted by the Bills of Exchange Act, 1890 (d) for in no sense do such instruments come within the words "a pledge of collateral security with authority to sell or dis- (6) Carroll v. Beard, 27 Out. R. 352. (c) Dominion Bank v. Wiggins, 21 Ont. App. 275. (d) Sec. 82, sub-sec. 3. SECTION FIVE. 93 pose thereof." (e) The mere adding to a properly drawn up promissory note the following words : " Should I sell or leave the land I now occupy, or make preparation to leave the Pro- vince, or should the note not be paid within one month after maturity, then in any such case it and all other notes given by the promissor to the promissee shall at once become due and payable, and suit may be entered and tried and finally disposed of in the court having jurisdiction at the place of payment hereof," will not affect the negotiability of the note as a promissory note, for the only effect of such words is to- accelerate the time of payment. The words do not make payment in any way conditional, nor is there any more un- certainty in the time of payment, than in the case of a note payable on or before a certain day, or of a note payable on demand. (/) But when the words added are " the title and right to the possession of the property for which this note- is given shall remain in the promissee until the note is paid," the note then ceases to be a negotiable promissory note, be- cause it becomes in effect a conditional payment, {g) A lien is " a right in one man to detain that which is in Ms possession, belonging to another, until certain demands of him, the person in possession, are satisfied, (h) Possession is necessary, either actual or constructive, to the existence of a lien, and a debt also must exist, arising oiit of the particular chattel sought to be held, and the title to the chattel must be in the debtor, (i). Now the very first element in trans- actions under this Act is that the property or title is not in the debtor, but in the creditor or vendor, and the other ele- ment akin to the first is that the debtor has the possession,, (e) Kirkwood v. Smith (1896J, 1 Q. B. 582: Prescott v. Garland, 34 N. B. R. 291: Bank of Hamilton v. Gillies, 12 Man. R. 495. (f) Chesaey v. St. John, 4 A. R. 10; Wise v. Charlton, 4 A. & E. 786 : Jury v. Barker, E. B. & E. 459 : hears v. Ag. Ins. Co., 32 C. P. dt p. 601. (g) Dominion Bank v. ^Viggins, 21 Ont. App. 275: Third Nat.. Bank v. Armstrong, 25 Minn. 530. (h) Reilly v. McIIlmtirray, 29 Ont. R. 1G7 : Hammonds v. Barclay, 2 East 227. (0 Forth V. Sinip-^on, 13 Q. B. 680, G80 ; Scarf v. Morgan, 4 M. & W. 283. 94 CONDITIONAL SALKS ACT. and not the vendor or creditor. The circumstances creating a lien are absolutely foreign to transactions under this Act, as adverse and opposite as it is possible to make them so, hence the use of the word lien in the section is inappropri- ate and ill-used. (;') The possession necessary to create a lien in favor of a vendor, may be the possession of an agent of the vendor, (k) Equitable liens, however, differ from common law liens in that in equitable liens it is not a necessary condition that the creditor or the vendor have actual or constructive possession of the chattel. They arise from a written contract whereby one party indicates an intention to make some particular pro- perty, fully identified by the contract, a security for a debt or obligation, and if the property be not at the time in esse but in posse, when it becomes in esse the equitable lien so contracted for, eo instanti, attaches to it. Such a contract is upheld, not alone between the original parties, but is good as against the heirs, executors and administrators of the person giving it, and against his assignees without value and subsequent encumbrancers with notice of the transac- tion. (Z) If, therefore, the word "lien" in the statute means anything, it means an " equitable lien " ; but, again, one cannot give an equitable lien on another man's property. A. cannot by contract give to B. an equitable lien on C.'s property, and so in this light the word is inapt. Such a lien could be contracted for, when, and if C.'s property becomes A.'s, but in transactions under the Act, when the property becomes the vendee's, all liability to the vendor will have been liquidated, the debt will be paid, and the same moment that would ' see the article the property of A. and the lien arise, would also see the written contract for the lien can- celled and satisfied by payment. In this view, an extended reference to the law of lien seems without the purview of this work. (;■) Carroll v. Beard, 27 Out. R. 361: see ante p. (fc) Allen V. Spencer, 1 Edm. (N.Y.) Lei. Gas. 117. (0 Ex p. Wais, 1 Ves. 162: Ex parte Matthews, 2 Ves. 272. SECTION SIX. vo (3) See ante section 2 note (i). (4) See ante section 2 note (4), bearing in mind that what is there said as to the method ol computing time applies, under this section, with the variance of " twenty days '" for " ten." The requirement put upon the manufacturer, bailor or vendor appears to be " directory '" only for the vendee's bene- fit and information — and the omission to leave such copy would not, of course, invalidate the instrument. 6. (1) Every manufacturer, bailor or vendor shall (2) in answer to any inquiry made by (3) any proposed iiurchaser or other interested person (4) within five days (5) furnish full information (6) respect- ing the amount or balance due or unpaid on any such (6a) manufac- tured goods or chattels, and the terms of payment of such amount or balance, and in case of his refusal or neglect (7) to furnish the information asked for, ( S ) such manufacturer, bailor or vendor shall on conviction before a Stipendiary or Police JIagistrate or two Justices of the Peace, be liable to a fine not exceeding $50. (2) Any person convicted under this Act shall have the right to appeal against such conviction to the .Judge of the County Court with- out a jury (9). (1) The Act extends not alone to the manufacturer of the chattel, but also to any other person not the manufacturer, who may be bailor or vendor thereof. (2) The word "shall" has to be construed as imperative as distinguished from the word '" may." which is construed as permissive, (a) (3) The statute does not point out how this enquiry is to be made. There is a course settled l)y statute, to be pur- sued when the enquiry is made by letter, (&) but there is none so fixed, when the application is a verbal one, and there is nothing to prevent the application being by word of mouth. A verbal application is, however, a highly objectionable course to adopt, not because there is any provision against such be- ing done, but because such a practice opens the door to much uncertainty of fact, and possible miscarriage of justice, in (o) R. S. O. 1887. cap. 1, sec. 8. siib-sec. 2. (6) Section 7 jjost. 96 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. the event of an action being taken on an alleged refusal of a verbal application. When made by letter the following is suggested as a form : To of Sib, I (name in full) am a proposed purchaser of (or) interested in the following manufactured chattel, namely : (here describe the same ) now in the possession of (give the name and description in full of the person in lohose possession the chattel is ) . I request full information respecting the amount due, or the balance due or unpaid to you, if anything, on said manufactured chattel, and the terms of payment of such amount or balance. My name is (here give name in full) and my post office address to which a reply may be sent is (here give name of post office). Dated at this day of A.D. 18S . (Signature of applicant.) (4) It is not everj'one who is entitled to the information required to be given by the manufacturer, bailor, or vendor. Only a proposed purchaser or other interested person in the chattel can compel the manufacturer, bailor, or vendor to furnish the information. A proposed mortgagee is a proposed purchaser p?-o tanta, therefore he comes within the statute; but it is more diffi- cult perhaps to determine the extent of the meaning to be given to the, words, "or other interested person." Do these words mean a future as well as a present interest? Their use is in the present tense, while the reference to a purchaser is in the future, and a legislative distinction may have been intended. The Bill of Sale and Chattel Mortgage Act, (c) uses words to clearly indicate an intended interest. A person contem- plating giving credit to the bailee or vendee of a chattel has not a present interest therein and the possibility of credit being given and thereby a future interest being acquired, is too remote to establish such person in the character of an "interested person." The opinion is ventured that even a creditor who has not established his right to proceed against (c) R. S. O. cap. 148. SECTION SIX. 97 the chattel is without the class included in the term " in- terested person." On the principle of ejusdem generis the words " other interested person " have a meaning, somewhat narrowed hy the preceding words " any proposed purchaser/' (d) and it is quite possible the very purpose of legislation may be defeated on account of the absence of clear and un- ambiguous words. The word " person " mentioned in the clause includes any body corporate, or politic, or party, and the heirs, executors, administrators, or other legal repre- sentative of such person to whom the context can apply ac- cording to law. (e) In case of dispute the onus would be upon the person making the demand, to shew that he was entitled under the Act to the information asked for. The consequences to the vendor for refusing such information, makes the question as to who is entitled to it, still more im- portant, for a prosecution must necessarily fail unless the person seeking the information successfully shews that he is within the meaning and contemplation of the Act. (5) The five days begin to run from, and are exclusive of, the day upon which the application is made. If the appli- cation be made on the first of August, then the information must be furnished on or before the 6th of August follow- ing, (/) but the application is not made \mtil it be received, and hence the five days begin to run from and exclusive of the day when the application is received, and the informa- tion is received, when it is given by registered letter, de- posited in the post ofiBce, (g) thus more than five days may elapse before the information is received, and yet the Act be complied with. Sunday counts as one day, when it intervenes, but not when it is the last day of the five. Formerly it was the law that when by statute a certain number of days was given for doing an act, the last of which happened to fall on a Simday, that (d) See Evans v. Uostyn, 2 C. P. D. 547 : Manton v. Taiois, L. R 30 Ch. D. 92. (e) R. S. O. cap. 1, sec. 8, sub-sec. 33: Pharmaceutical Society v. London, 5 App. Cases 857. (/) McLean v. Pinlcerton, 7 A. R. 492. (ff) Section 7, post. B A.— 7 98 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. day in such ease was included in the time given, and the party had no further time within which to do the act, unless the statute expressly provided that it might be done on the day following, (h) but this has been changed, (t) When necessary to carry out the ends of justice, the Court will divide a day, or even an hour, and thus give the party equitably entitled thereto the benefit of every moment of time, (;") but in determining the operation of a statute the fraction of a day is not taken into consideration, (k) (6) The statute suggests a course which should be adopted in furnishing the information asked for. (Z) This course should in all cases be followed, not that any other, even one by word of mouth, is illegal, but because in any other than .that suggested by the statute the duty, possibly a diflBcult one, of proving that the information was given, would rest upon the manufacturer, vendor, or bailor; whereas the information is presumed to have been received by the person applying for it, if the statutory course is shewn to have been followed. The following is suggested as a simple and sufficient form to be used in supplying the information demanded. To of {the name and post office address given by the person enquiring.) SIK, The amount due {or) The balance due {orj The amount unpaid {or) The balance unpaid on that certain manufactured chattel re- ferred to by you in your application for information bearing date the day of , 188 , and received by the under- signed on the day of 188 , is the sum of $ The terms of payment of such amount (or) balance are as follows {here state fully the sum to ie paid, the time or time of payment, with or without interest if on, or by way of promissory note, or by icay of rent or otherwise ) . This statement is mailed to you at the above address and registered. Dated this day of at in the {Signature of manufacturer, or vendor, or bailor). {h) McLean v. Piiiherton, 7 A. R. 190: Gibson v. ilichaeVs Bay Lumber Co., 1 O. R. 7^6 : In re Parke, 13 L. R. Chy. Ir. 85. (i) R. S. O. cap. 1, sec. 8, sub-sees. 16 and 17. (/) Beckman v. Jarvi.'i. 3%Q. B. 280. {k) Mitchell v. DoIkuii. 3 L. J. 185. (I) See sec. 7, infra. SECTION SIX. 99 (6a) By the Act 6 Edw. VII. cap. 19, sec. 34, the word " manufactured," which here appears immediately after the word " such," is struck out from and after the 1st January, 1907. This amendment hecomes necessary, otherwise the benefits of the section would not be open to that class of persons the amending Act is designed to benefit. (7) The refusal or neglect is the refusal or neglect of the manufacturer, bailor, or vendor, to whom application is made. No provision is made in case the application is to a person in the employ, or the agent, of the manufacturer, bailor, or vendor. The application, then, must be brought home to the knowledge of the manufacturer, etc., before the proceedings consequent upon a refusal or neglect can be taken. Before a conviction can be secured the refusal or neglect must be . established, and in a conviction, care must be taken that therein the non-observance of these statutory conditions pre- cedent, are expressed, otherwise the conviction might be quashed. (8) It is onlj' the information asked for that must be fur- nished, and then not beyond that which the statute mentions, even if more is asked for. Should the application narrow the information wanted to less than the information com- pellable under the statute, then the manufacturer cannot be proceeded against for not furnishing the full information provided for by the statute. If the words " within the time aforesaid " had been added after the word " for "' in the seventh line of this section, a doubt would not arise, which may now arise, as to whether the manufacturer renders himself liable to the penalty men- tioned when he omits to furnish the information until after the expiration of the period of five days. (9) The proceedings to be taken in case of refusal or neg- lect to furnish the information are those provided for by K. S. 0. cap. 90, s. 1, and are the like proceedings as if the penalty had been imposed by the Criminal Code or other Do- minion statute. If there is a conviction, the justice or police magistrate may order the defendant to pay costs (s. 4 (1)), or he may order the prosecutor to pay costs should he dismiss 100 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. the information or complaint (s. 4 (2)). These costs must be such that seem reasonable and not inconsistent with the fees established by law. (m) It does not appear that the statute E. S. 0. cap. 90, which provides for proceedings by way of appeal, governs the appeal provided for in this sec- tion. The appeal granted by the above statute (E. S. 0. cap. 92, ss. 2, 3) is to the General Sessions of the Peace, the practice and procedure in which, being the same as the prac- tice and proceedings under the statute of the Dominion of Canada, then in force, permits of the intervention of a jury. This section deprives either party of a jury, and the appeal is not to the General Sessions, but to the Judge of the County Court sitting in Chambers, and the practice and proceedings on such appeal are governed by another statute. (n) It will be observed that should the presiding justice dismiss the information or complaint, the informant, how- ever much he may be aggrieved, has no appeal, because it is only the person convicted to whom the right of appeal is given, (o) The conviction referred to means the conviction of the party against whom the information or complaint is laid, (p) (9) For proceedings on appeal see E. S. 0. cap. 92. 7. The person (1) so inquiring shall if such iuguiry is by letter give a name and post office address to which a reply may be sent ( 2 1 and it shall be sufficient if the information aforesaid be given by regis- tered letter deposited in the post office (3) within the said five days (4 1 addressed to the person inquiring at his proper post office address, ( .J I or where a name and address is given as aforesaid, addressed to such person by the name and at the post office so given. (6) (1) The person so inquiring must be a proposed pur- chaser or other person interested in the chattel, (a) (2) It seems to be imperative on the person applying to give a name and post office address to which a reply may be (III) R. S. O. cap. 95, sec. 1, Schedule. (in R. S. O. cap. 1)2. ■ (o) fie IJtirphy ct Cornish, 8 Prac. 420." (p) Reyiiia v. Toronto P. *.'. Board, 31 O. R. 457. («) Ante sec. 2, foot note 4. SECTION SEVEN. ]0l sent, and yet the duty does not seem to be a condition pre- cedent to a reply being sent, because provision is made by this section for sending the reply to the person enquiring at his proper address, or to the written address when given, which latter address may not be the proper add/ress of the person enquiring. (6) When. an address is given the infor- mation must be sent to that address ; if none is given then to his proper address. (3) If the letter is deposited in the post office it is not necessary to prove that it was received. Any loss or mis- carriage will not prejudice the sender, (c) The statute per- mits and Justifies mailing the information, which, in effect, is the same as if the enquirer gave instructions so to send the information, (d) The letter should be posted at the general post ofiiee, or at an authorized receiving house, (e) Delivery to a mail-carrier is not sufficient. (/) The post- mark is prima facie evidence that the letter was mailed in the office to which the marks relate on the day designated, (g) but not conclusive evidence, (h) and the genuineness of the post-mark may be proved, not alone by a post office employee, but by any witness, (i) Should the letter miscarry through the indistinctness of the handwriting of the manufacturer, vendor or bailor, then the statute will not have been com- ( B ) See Eastern Bank v . Brown, 17 Me. 356 : Crowley v. Barry, 4 Gill. 194 : Bell v. Hayersiown Bank, 7 Gill. 216 : Burmester v. Barron. 17 Q. B. 828. (c) Warwick v. Noakes, Peake N. P. 67- Parker v. Gordon, 7 East 385: Dobree v. Eastwood, 3 C. & P. 250: Htocken v. (Jollen. 7 M & W. 515. (d) Nat. Bank of Belief ante y. McManigle, 69 Penn St. 156. (e) Hawkins v. Rutt, Peake's N. P. C. 186. (f) Hawkins t. Rutt, supra. (g) Early v. Preston, 1 Pat. and Heath 228: Crawford v. Branch Bank, 1 Ala. 205 : l\"ew Haven Go. Bank v. Mitchell. 15 Conu. 206 : Archangelo v. Thompson, 2 Camp. 620: Rea- v. Plumer. Rus. & Ry. 264 : Langdon \. Hulls, 5 Esp. 156 : Fletcher v. Braddyll. 8 Stark 64. (h) Stocken v. Collin, 7 M. and W. .i45 : 9 C. & P. 6?;n {?,S E. C. L. R.). (i) Woodcock V. Honldsuorth, IG JI. and W. 124: FletcJicr v. Braddyll, supra. 102 CONDITIONAL SALICS ACT. plied with. (;') It will not be suflBcient to shew that the letter was placed in a tray to be carried to the post office, and that in the usual course of the manufacturer's business all letters deposited in the tray were carried to the post office by a clerk, {k) though it might be sufficient if the clerk estab- lished that, though he had no recollection of the particular letter, he invariably carried to the post office all the letters foimd in the tray. (I) (4) The person to whom application is made for informa- tion has five days from the day of the date of the applica- tion within which to deposit the letter containing the infor- mation in the post office. The time does not begin to run until the application is received, which may not be until the second day, or even later, after the application was mailed. If the second day, then that day is excluded, the time be- ginning to run on the third day, which becomes the first day of the five, then on the fifth day therefrom, the information is posted, and if the letter containing it be not received until (say) the second day after the day of mailing, a period of nine days will have elapsed, and yet the statute be not dis- regarded, (m) (5) The statute appears to contemplate an omission by the applicant to furnish a post office address, and yet the duty of the applicant to do so appears to be imperative. What is a man's proper address ? The office to which a per- son actually goes for his letters is always the proper one, even though he may not live there or have his place of busi- ness there, («.) but if such is not the office where he receives his letters, then the information should be directed to the post office at or nearest to the applicant's place of resi- (;■) Hewitt v. Thompson, 1 Mood & Rap. 543. (fc) Sethermgton v. Kemp, 4 Camp. 194: Hawhes v. Salter, 4 Bing. 715, B. C. L. R. vol. 13 : 1 Mo. & P. 750 S. P. See 3 Camp. 379 : 1 M. & Sel. 567 S. C. (I) SkUbeck ,. Garbett, 14 L. J. 338 Q. B. : 7 Q. B. 846. (m) See ante section 2, foot note (5). (n.) Farmers Bank v. Gurnell, 26 Grat. 137 : Bressard v. Levering, 6 Wheat. 102. SECTION SEVEN. 103 dence. (o) Care should be exeicised in writing the address, foi;, should the letter miscarry by reason of a confused or in- distinct address, the information will not be considered as having been furnished, (p) A general address will hardly be sufiScient, especially when the information is intended for one at a large place, for ex- ample. " Mr. Jones, Toronto," is a direction more likely than otherwise not to reach the person for whom it is intended, (q) but, if the first name were prefixed, it might be suf&cient. (r) Should there be two places of delivery in one town, an ad- dress to the town itself will be sufficient, unless it be known at the time to the sender of the letter at which of the two post offices the party receives his letters, (s) If a person usually receives his letters at the place where he is engaged in business, then the information should be sent there, but if such place is not known, then the letter should be sent to the place where the person lives, (t) Where it is known that a party receives letters at two different post offices, then it would be safer to direct the information asked for to both addresses, but a letter addressed to either place will be sufB- cient, (u) and it will be sufficient if addressed to one post office,, equi-distant with another post office, from the party's residence, although the latter post office is where he usually receives his letters, (v) A place of temporary sojourn is not a proper address whereat to send information; {w) but if (o) Sank of Golumiia v. Lawrence, 1 iPet. 582: Bank of Geneva v. Hewlett, 4 Wend. 328: Mercer v. Lancaster, 5 Barr. 160: Jones v. Lewis, 8 W. & S. 14. (p) Hewitt V. Thompson, 1 Mood. & Rob. 543. (g) Mann v. Moors, 1 R. & M. 249: Clarke v. Sharpe, 3 M. & W. 166. (r) True v. Collins, 3 Allen 440. (s) Morton v. Westcott, 8 Gush. 425 : Cahot Bank v. Russett, 4 Tidy 167: Bank of Manchester v. Slason, 13 Vt. 334: Downer v. Remer, 21 Wend. 10. («) Seneca Co. Bank v. Neass, 3 Corns. 442: 5 Denio 329. (») Exchange v. Boyce, 3 Rob. (La) 807. See Ghonteau v. Webster, 6 Mete 1. (t) Rand v. ReynoldSi 2 Grat. 171. (to) Runyon v. Mountfort, Beebee 371: Steiinrt v. Ed^n, 2 Gaines 121. 104 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. the information is requested by a member of the House of Commons or Legislative Assembly it will be suf&cient to send the reply to the applicant addressed at the place where the bodies are in session, (x) but this rule will only apply during the period of session. (6) Care should be taken to address the information to the post office and by the name given. The statute, then, stands between the person applied to and the person applying, and the former runs no risk. It will always suffice to follow the direction given by the applicant, although the address given be not that whereat the applicant usually receives his letters, (y) 8. In case any manufacturer, bailor or vendor (1) of any chattels (2) in respect to which there has been a conditional sale_or promise of sale (3) or his successor in interest (4) takes possession thereof for breach of condition, (-51 he shall retain the same for twenty days, 1,6) and the bailee or his successor in interest may redeem the same within such period, (7) on payment of the full amount then in arrear, together with interest and the actual costs and expenses of taking and keeping possession which have been incurred (8). (1) The manufacturer, bailor, or vendor are those men- tioned in section one. It is not indispensable that the article conditionally sold or promised to be sold, should belong to the owner. It might be sold by a third party with the owner's consent. (2) See ante section one, note (4). (3) Unless there has been a conditional sale or a promise of sale, this section has no application. The writer ven- ture? the suggestion that the term conditional sale is not anriropriately used here or throughout the statute. A con- ditional sale, strictly speaking, appears to be a sale with right of 7-«-pur<3hase in the vendor. This statute is intended to meet the case of a sale with right of purchase in the vendee. (x) Chouteau v. ^Vebster, (j Mete 1: (Iraham v. Sangston, 1 Md. 59: Mart- v. Johnston. 9 Terg. 1. (;/) Eastern Biinl- v. lironii. 17 Me. 3.50: C'rmrtcy v. Barry. 4 Gill. 10-t. SECTION EIGHT. 105 In the one case the sale is made with right of re-purchase in the vendor: in the other ease the sale is not yet really made, but the right of purchase is in the vendee. In the one case the property passes ; in the other the possession only passes, (a) An instance of a promise of sale, or an agree- ment to sell upon a condition, is found in the case of Steven- son V. Bice, (6) where the agreement was as follows : — Received from Weber & Company a seven octave rosewood piano. No. 6854, on hire for three months, at $6 per month, payable in advance, the said piano being valued at $300, which sum I agree to pay in the event of the said instrument being destroyed, injured, or not returned to the said Weber & Co. on demand, free of expense, in good order, reasonable wear excepted. It is agreed that I may purchase the said piano for the sum of $300, payable as follows: — Three pro- missory notes, payable in one, twelve and twenty-four months from the date hereof. The whole to be paid within the said time with interest at seven per cent, per- annum from date. But until the whole of the said purchase money be paid, the said piano shall remain the property of the said Weber & Co., on hire by me. And in default of the punctual payment of any instalment of the said purchase money, or of the said monthly rental in advance, the said Weber & Co. may secure possession of the said piano without any previous demand, although a part of the purchase money may have been paid, or a note or notes given by me on account thereof, this agree- ment for sale being conditional, and punctual payment being essential to it. But in the event of the said piano being so returned to the said Weber & Co. in good order, any sum re- ceived on account of the purchase money beyond the amount due for rent, and any expenses incurred in reference to the said instrument will be paid. Witness, (Signed) Jerome Mark. (o) For instance, of conditional sales wlierein the property passes, see ante p. 3, note (3). (6) 24 U. C. C. P. 245. 106 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. Another instance is found in Newhall v. Kingsbury (c) where a mowing machine was agreed to be sold, the price therefor being paid in instalments, but the machine was not to become the property of the vendee until paid for. Another instance was in Mowland v. Johnson, [d) where a sewing machine was agreed to be sold; another in Laihem V. Summer, (e) where a piano was so sold; and other in- stances in the following several cases: Singer Sewing Co. V. Treadway, (f) Howe Machine Co. v. Willie (g) Fusion v. Whitney, {h) Johnson v. Whittemore, (i) Hine v. Boberts, {j) Third National Bank of Syracuse v. Armstrong, (fc) Min- neapolis, etc., Co. V. Hally, (l) Ketchum v. Brennan (m) And again another instance in the case of Whelan v. Couch (n) wherein the agreement was in the following words: — "This agreement made this thirty-first day of August, 1874, between John Whelan of Toronto, saloon-keeper, and Josiah Thomas Couch, of the same place, saloon-keeper. The sail! Whelan liath agreed to sell, and the said Couch to purchase the right to use the fixtures of bowling alley in and pertaining to the premises in rear of number sixty-six, on the west side of Jarvis street, in the city of Toronto, as now used by the said Whelan, and access to use the same thereto from Jarvis street, together with the beds, balls and pins only (as the other fixtures and fittings do not per- tain to the bargain), for the sum of ten hundred and seventy- eight dollars in gold, payable three hundred and fifty dollars in cash at this time, and one hundred and nine dollars on the first day of each of the months of October, ISTovember (c) 131 Mass. 445. ((?) 7 Daley 297. (e) 89 111. 333. (f) 4: Brad." 57. (g) 85 111. (ft) 23 Mich. 260, 267. (»■) 27 Mich. 463, 470. {}) 48 Conn. 267. (fc) 25 Minn. 530. (1) 27 Id. 495. (m) 53 Aliss. 596. (jt) 26 Grant, 74 SKOI'KJN EIGHT. 107 and December next ensuing the date thereof, and the sum of fifty-nine dollars on the first day of January next, 1875; and the further sum in equal payments of nine dollars per month (the first of such payments of nine dollars to be made on the first day of February, 1875), on the first days of each and every month after the said first day of January as aforesaid, until the full balance of said purchase money shall have been paid in full without interest. The said Couch to have possession on the first day of September next, but only as in the nature of one subservient to said Whelan, and he is not to have any other right or title to the place, nor is this agreement intended to be complete nor to operate in favor of said Couch until the whole of the said payments have been made, when this right or title shall be considered complete. And in ease of default in the after payments, as above, or any of them, all matters hereunder are supposed and considered to fall through, and moneys paid hereunder to be forfeited to said Whelan. It is further agreed that said Couch is to keep the place orderly, quiet, decent and peaceable, and well cleaned, and to close the place at twelve o'clock each night, and open at six o'clock each morning. He shall also keep the place open, in good running order, each and every lawful day and night, and properly managed and looked after, and make it as productive as possible. ■' The players at each alley to have the privilege of playing three balls for the benefit of the house. " The place and things pertaining to said alleys passing by this agreement to be insured. "The said Couch shall conduct no other business upon said premises. Time to be of the essence of this agreement. " The said beds, balls and pins are not to be removed from said premises until paid for in full. " As witness our hands and seals this thirty-first day of August, 1874. John Whelan. [L. S.] J. T. Couch, Jr." [L. S.] (4) Any one who acquires the entire interest of the manu- facturer, bailor or vendor, becomes the siiccessor in interest lOS COXUITIONAL SALES ACT. of such manufacturer, bailor and vendor. A mortgagee of the chattel succeeds the bailor in interest, (o) In such a case the bailee might properly decline to give up the chattel to the bailor, because to do otherwise would render the bailee liable to an action (p) (5) Upon breach of condition, the vendor may at once take possession of the chattels. If the vendee holds under a hire or rent receipt and wrongfully sells the lease is termin- ated, and, the vendor or hirer may resume possession, and he may recover it from the person to whom it has been sold, (q) and so far as the legal rights of the parties are concerned without reference to this statute, he may henceforth treat the chattels absolutely as his own, regardless of the contract under which they were agreed to be sold. He may sell them or give them away with or without first taking possession; (r) he may squander them or destroy them, (s) But, if a vendor chooses to do any of these things, he can- not still maintain the contract in its integrity, an(J seek to recover from the vendee the price of the chattels, (t) which, by his own act he has placed beyond his control, (m) If he is determined to hold the vendee to his bargain, then he is bound to keep the cliattel for delivery to him upon payment, and if he disables himself from doing this, then he entitles the vendee to repudiate the contract, for his act operates in law a rescission of the contract, (v) The chattel must be kept so as to be redelivered to the vendee in as good condi- tion as when retaken by the vendor ; for if he has put it to his own use and it has become worn or injured, then the vendor (o) Everest v. Hale, 67 Me. 497. (p) European and Australiaii. Royal Mail Go. v. Royal Mail Steam Packet Co., 8 Jur. N. S. 136 : 30 LI. J. C. P. 247. (q) Singer Co. v. Clark, 5 Ex. D. 37. (r) Hulhard v. Bliss, 12 Allen (Mass.) 590. (s) Jones on Ch. Jltge. 2ud ed. p. 1. Pate v. Parmlci/. 43 How. (N.T.) Pr. 445: 34 N. Y., S. C. 398: Tompkins v. Batie, 11 Neb. 147, 151. (t) White V. Smith, 28 N. S. R. 5. (m) Arnold v. Playter, 22 Ont. R. 609. (v) Leanor v. McLaughlin. 32 L. R. A. 467. SECTION EIGHT. 109 cannot recover the balance of the purchase money, (w) It makes no diiference in this respect if default is first made by the vendee in one or more of his payments, and upon which default the vendor resumes possession, (x) The reason for this is, perhaps, that the vendee not only never acquired any title to or right of possession in the chattel, but by his ven- dor's act he has been wholly deprived of his power to acquire any, even should he pay or offer to pay the price, (y) An- other reason might be given which at once appeals to one's sense of right, namely, that where there is a failure to per- form one part of a bargain, whieii goes to the root of the contract, such failure enables the other party to the contract to say: "I am not going to perform my part of it, when performance by you of your part is defeated by your own misconduct;"' (z) but the non-performance so alleged in breach of the contract must unquestionably go to the whole root and consideration of it, otherwise the part broken is not to he considered as a condition precedent, but as a distinct covenant for the breach of which the party injured may be compensated in damages, (a) If the vendor, instead of disposing of the chattel, should store it and retain it for the vendee, then he may sue the vendee for the entire price, but payment of the price and delivery of the chattel should then be contemporaneous. But payment of the price must be payment by the vendee under the contract, for if the contract so provide, the vendor may sell the chattel to recover his money, and if he fails to get it all, he may then sue the original vendee for the balance due under the contract, because in such a case there has not been a rescission of the contract. (I) In case the vendee, having by agreement under seal agreed to take an article to be manufactured, afterwards refuses so to do. the vendor may («/) Harris v. Dvstin, 1 N. W. T. Rep. 6 (part 4). (x) Sawyer v. Pringle, 18 A. R. 218. (I/) Minneapolis Harvester Works v. H alley, 27 Minn. 495. (s) Mersey Steel Go. v. Baylor, 9 App. Cases 443. (a) Cou-an v. Fislier, 31 0. R, 426. (b) Saicijcr v. Pringle, 18 A. E. 218: Arnold v. Plapter, 22 O. R. 609. 110 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. then sell the article, acting as agent for the vendee in so doing. If there is a deficiency, the vendor may recover the difference between the contract price, and the price obtained on such resale, as he may keep the property as his own, in which event he may recover the difference between the market ■ price at the time and place of delivery and the contract 'price, (c) Should there be default in the vendor, as for example should he fail to deliver the article bargained for, the vendee may rescind the contract, and may recover from the vendor any payments which in the meantime he may have made; but he cannot disaffirm the contract if he has, by his conduct or otherwise, acquiesced in. the default;, nor can he take advantage of a fraudulent misrepresentation, to rescind the contract if, after he received it he did not within a reasonable time announce the fraud and disaffirm the con- tract; and of course, once having made a contract, the vendee cannot by the simple act of returning the article, or offering to return it, put an end to the transaction, (d) From the dicta in Sawyer v. PringU (supra), it is to be inferred that the vendee loses any portion of the purchase money, that he may have paid, prior to the breach, upon the happening of which the vendor has taken possession; but the decisions are not all in this direction, although the prevailing opinion is that instalments already paid are forfeited upon default in payment of subsequent instalments, (e) Some of the States' Courts acting upon equitable principles require the vendor who rescinds the contract for default, after receiving partial payments, to refund the sum already paid after deducting a reasonable compensation for the use of the property, (f) Such seems to be the law in the Province of Quebec, where a vendor before he is entitled to a payment in an action of revendication. must first offer to pay the portion of the price (o) Dmmtan v. McAiidreiv (1870), 44 N. Y. 72: Waterous Engine Works Co. V. Pro^t, 30 Out. 540. See Sawyer v. BaxkerviUe. 10 Man. R. 6.52. (d) Howe Machine Go. v. Wilson. S.j 111. 333: Frijc v. Millignn, 10 Out. R. 311; Tomlinson v. ilorris, 12 Ont. U. 311; Ciill \. Roberts, 28 Ont. (e) Eng. and Am. End. of Law, vol. 6, p. 458. (/■) Idem, p. 459: Benjamin on Sales, ed. 321. SEC'l'ION EIGHT. Ill he has already received; (g) and this, in that Province, ap- pears to be the law, even though the vendor has a right to offset against, the amount received by him, a claim for the use of the article, (h) The provision that the property in the chattel shall not pass until the price is entirely paid is, in that Province, considered a good suspensive condition operative in favor of the vendor, when he tenders back or offers to repay the portion of the price already paid by the vendee, (i) But the rule only applies so long as the vendee is in possession of the thing sold, and does not operate against a third-party who comes into possession of an immoveable, to which are attached moveable things, which by law are im- moveable by destination. (;') If the principle of law pre- vails that all payments are forfeited, then it is in the power of a vendor to work a serious injury upon his vendee when the default of the latter is among the last of his payments. Thus it is, if the agreement does not provide that on de- fault, the vendor may resell, without notice to the vendee, the vendor has not the right to resell without reasonable notice to the vendee or his assigns. The reason is that such a practice would be allowing the vendor " to fix the measure of damages or the amount of the balance by his own act, without notice or warning to the party interested, and having assumed to sell without notice it becomes open to the vendee to impeach the sale by shewing that a greater sum could have been realized if the chattel had been properly sold after pro- per notice." (fc) At all events, it is clear that a promissory note given for some of the payments cannot be collected by the payee if he has previously taken the property, because, in iff) Gousmeam v. The WUliams Mfg. Co., Q. R. 11 S. C. 389: Filiatrault v. Ooldie, Q. R. 2 Q. B. 368: Damase Laine and others v. Theophile Boland, 26 S. C. R. 419. (7s) Tafts V. Oirowse, Q. R. 12 S. C. 530. (0 See also Staron v.* Comp. des Moteurs uu Gaz\ S. 1, 90. IJ. 113. (j) Taschereau, J.. Wanridge v. Farrell, 18 C. S. C. R. at p. 20. (k) Discher v. C. P. L. £ 8. Co., 18 Ont. R. 273. 112 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. such case, the consideration for the note has failed. (Z) And in Jv^ova Scotia it is held that a vendor who retakes the pro- pertj^ and retains it, cannot recover the purchase price be- cause he has rescinded the contract, (m) And again if, after judgment is obtained by the vendor upon the promissory notes of his vendee, the vendor takes possession and sells the chat- tel, he cannot afterwards collect any balance due on his judgment, because the consideration for the judgment has disappeared by the intentional act of the judgment credi- tors, (n) Once there is a breach by the vendee, tnen it behooves the vendor to be cautious, because very little may amount to a waiver, and stop or postpone all his rights until the happen- ing of another breach. For instance, the receipt of pay- ments after a breach is held to be a waiver of the breach; (o) and before seizing the property he must make a fresh demand for payment, (p) And in fact allowing the vendee to remain m possession for a long time without any request for pay- ments due, or for the return of the property, may be a waiver of the condition, (q) Likewise the vendor may defeat his own rights by election. Thus if a vendor sues and recovers judgment against his vendee for the price of goods condition- ally sold, after the goods have been transferred to an innocent " purchaser from the vendee, the original vendor cannot re- cover the goods from such innocent purchaser, because the recovery of the judgment is looked upon as an election by the vendor to treat the contract as completed, (r) There may be in the agreement many other defaults specified upon the happening of any of which the vendor is at liberty to (J) Gait, J., Oleason v. Knapp, at p. 560: Arnold v. Playter, 22 Ont. R. 603: Leanor v. McLaughlin (1895) 32 L. R. A. 467, 165 Pa. 150 : Benjamin on Sales, p. 302. (m) White v. Smith, 28 N. S. R. 5. (») Arnold v. Planter, supra. (o) Hatchings v. Munger, 41 N. Y. 155. (p) .O'Ronrlce v. Hudcock, 114 N. Y. .341. (q) Gorham v. Uolden. 79 Me. 317: Perkins v. Grobien (1898), 3» L. R. A. 815 (Mich. Sup. Ct.). (r) Purtle v. Heney, 33 X. B. R. 607. SECTION EIGHT. 113 resume possession, and even though no default be made in payment, yet if the agreement so provide, the vendor may resume possession, if any statement in the contract on the part of the vendee he untrue, or if the vendee should become insolvent, or should allow an execution to issue against his goods, or if he should abscond, or leave the chattels exposed to the elements or to accident, or should omit to pay his taxes, or for any other good cause. Such conditions would leave it optional with the vendor to resume possession at his pleas- ure, wholly beside any default in payment, (s) So likewise a stipulation, that the chattels shall remain at a certain specified place, and shall not be removed without the written consent of the vendor, is a valid and binding' condition, the violation of which will entitle the vendor to retake posses- sion, and a single consent to one removal will not be con- strued into a consent to a second removal. This statute appears only to contemplate the case of pos- session being taken as a breach of condition. It does not, in express terms, interfere with the common law right to t^ke possession at any time, even before breach of condition, when by the contract the vendor retains in himself the ownership, and does not provide for possession being had by the vendee until default or condition broken. If the contract do not contain a clause giving the vendee the right to possession until default, or until condition broken, then possession taken at any time under such a contract, provided it retain the ownership in the vendor, is a possession which the vendor has a right to acquire without reference to the vendee, and would effect the same result, as if the taking of possession had resulted from the act of the vendee, (t) Possession follows the property, is the rule of law. The right of possession is an incident to the right of property. The property being in the vendor, the right to possession is in him too, provided the contract does not otherwise pro- (s) Sawyer v. Pringle, 18 O. A. R. 218. (t) Smith V. Fair, 11 A. R. 763. B.C. A. — 8 114 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. vide, and therefore the vendor may assume possession at any time (u). This rule of law, however, may be relaxed where an im- plication arises that possession was unquestionably intended to remain with the vendee, (v) Such an implication may arise in all those instances wherein the absolute use and possession of the chattel is indispensable to the performance by the vendee of his cove- nants in regard thereto; (w) but it does not appear that the simple reservation of the right to the vendor to enter and take possession upon default in payment and sell to satisfy his claim, will override the general rule of law as above stated, (.r) This feature of the law is only important in regard to the present subject, if it be found that the statute, by providing for a course to be pursued when possession is taken for breach of condition, does not by implication or otherwise modify the common law doctrine, as to taking possession above referred to. The view is taken that the statute does not provide against such a taking possession. It merely states what shall be done when possession is taken for a breach of condition, and we are told that "the limited function of a Judge is not to say what the Legislature meant, but to ascertain what the Legislature has said that it meant." (y) The anticipation is therefore indulged, that the manufac- turer, seeking to evade the trouble to them of compliance with the statute, will act upon their common law right whenever it is possible so to do. («) Porter v. FUntoft, 6 C. P. 335 : White v. Morru, 11 0. B. 1015 Riittan V. Beamish, 10 C. P. 90: MeAuley v. Allen, 20 C. P. 417 Samuel v. Colter, 28 C. P. 240: Coles x. Clark, 3 Cush. (Mass.) 899 Hall V. Sampson, 35 N. Y. 274: Londoii v. Emmons, 97 Mass. 37. (!)) Samuel v. Colter; supra: Bingham v. Bettison, 30 C. P. 438: ^y heeler v. Montefiori, 2 Q. B. 133: Albert v. Grosvenor Invest. Co, L. R. 3 Q. B. 123. (ic) Babcock v. McFarland, 43 111. 381. (x) Ferguson y. Thomas, 2(i Jle. 499: Smith v. Fair. 11 .V. R. 763. (//) Matthews, J., in Rothschild v. Commissioners of Inland Revenue (1894), 2 Q. B. at p. 145. SICCTION EIGHT. I 15 If there is a license to the vendor in thu contract to take possession upon default, the license is irrevocable, and the vendor may upon default, in whole or in part of the purchase money, enter the buyer's house and forcibly remove the chattel; (z) but the entry must be made in a reasonable manner and v?ithout needless violence, (a) and will not justify the vendor in creating a breach of the criminal law in order to acquire the property. (&) He may go on another man's land to get his chattel, (c) at least, if he can shew it was not on the land through his own fault or neglect, (d) and even then he may do so at the risk of having to pay any dam- ages incurred in exercising this right. A forcible entry into a house by a conditional vendor under an agreement granting the right to him to break in to get and take away the goods conditionally sold, is not a forcible entry within the terms of the Criminal Code, (e) provided it was made with the clear intention of getting the goods, but rather partakes of a trespass for which the trespasser may be liable in a civil ac- tion, and this is so, although the entry was opposed by the occupant of the house, and so made as to bring about a breach of the peace. (/) So long as the relative position of debtor and creditor exists, just so long may the vendor pursue all or any of his remedies given him by the agreement to be exercised upon default. He may exercise them concurrently, but cannot pursue more than one to satisfaction, (rj) By satisfaction is (»> Walsh V. Taylur, 39 Md. 592: McClelland v. Nichols, 24 Minn 176. (a) Drury v. Hervcy. 126 Mass. 519: GhurehUl v. Hulhert, 110 Mass. 42. (6) London Go. v. Drake, 6 C. B. N. S. 768. (c) McCh-egor v. .VcXeflJ, 32 C. P. 538 : Wolfe v. Home, 2 Q. B, D. 355 : Saint % . Pelle^j, L. R. 10 Ex. 137 : Patrick v. Golarick, 3 M & W. 483. (d) Read v. Smith, Ber, 173. (e) Sec. 89. (f) Queen v. Pike, 2 Can. Crim. Cases 314. (jr) Sawyer r. Pringle. nupru : Wateroiis v. Wilson, 11 Man. R. 295: Kirchoffer v. Clement. 11 Man. R. 460. 116 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. meant a full and complete payment of the debt, and so a vendor may both retake possession and proceed to judg- ment, (h) (6) The twenty days is exclusive of either the first or last day of the taking possession. This is in accordance with the general rule as to the computation of time, which is to make the first day inclusive, and the last day exclusive, or vice versa, (i) Sunday is counted as one day only when it is one of the intervening days. (j). (7) The vendor, having taken possession, must do nothing calculated to prevent restoration of the property in as good and sound a condition as when taken, in the event of the bailee deciding to redeem, at the end of the period of twenty days. Should he so act as to prevent restoration, he becomes amenable to the law, and liable in damages for placing the property beyond redemption. This not only is the result of the present statutory enactment, but it is the law in those cases wherein the vendor takes possession, prior to condition broken, by virtue of the omission in the contract of the right to possession being with the vendee, (k) Not only can the bailee redeem, but the right is given to any one who is his successor in interest. His mortgagee may be such a successor in interest, and should the mortga- gee redeem, then his interest would merge in the higher or greater interest, and he would become the owner, (l) But for the statute, the vendor might take the property from the vendee, or from any one claiming through him, though he be a purchaser or mortgagee in good faith, and without notice of the condition, and deprive them of all right or (h) Darr v. Replogle, 167 Pa. 347; Breioer v. Ford, 54 Hun. (N.Y.) 116. (i) See cases cited Barron on Bills of Sale, etc., 2nd ed., p. 317. (;1 See ante p. 97. (k) Lush, J., Albert v. Grosvenor Investment Co.. L. R. 3, Q. B. 123: Bingham v. Bettison, 30 U. C. C. P. 438: Spaulding v. Barnea, 4 Gray (Mass.) 330: per Osier, J., Smith v. Fair, 11 A. R. 763. {I) Forman v. Proctor, 9 B. Mon. (Ky. ) 124: Chase v. Ingalli,. :22 JJass. 381 : Currier v. Kiiapp, 117 Mass. ,824. SECTION NINE. 117 interest in the property, (m) but now all claiming under, from, or through the bailee has an equal right to redeem within the statutory period of twenty days. The right, too, is possessed by the vendee's vendee, his mortgagee, executor or administrator or legal representative. No one entitled to redeem can in any way impair his right to redeem. This statutory right to redeem is now paramount to the instrument itself and may be enforced even in opposition to its terms, as for instance, in defiance of an agreement by the bailee in the instrument of bailment to abandon his right to redemp- tion, upon his failure to perform the condition. («.) (8) The amount can be ascertained by adopting the pro- ceedings given by section 6 (1), (3), p. 91, and see. 7, p. 97. The amending Act 6 Edw. VII. chap. 19, sec. 35, adds the words " and keeping." Prior to such amendment, a con- ditional vendor was confined iu his demands to the cost of " taking " possession. He now can, in relation to transac- tions from and after the 1st January, 1907, extend his claim to cost of " keeping " as well as " taking " possession. 9. Where the goods or chattels (1) have been sold or balled (2) originally for a greater sum than $30 (3) and the same, have been taken possession of, as In the preceding section mentioned (4) such goods or chattels shall not be sold without five days' (5) notice (6) of the intended sale (7) being first given to the bailee or his successor in interest. (8) The notice may be personally served (9) or may, in the absence of such bailee or his successor in interest, be left at his residence or last known place of abode in Ontario, or may be sent by registered letter, deposited in the post ofiice at least seven days before the time when the said five days will elapse, addressed to the bailee or his successor in interest, at his last known post office address in Canada. (10) The said five days or seven days may be part of the twenty days in section 8 mentioned. (11) (1) See ante page 11, note 3. (2) See ante page 31, note 6. (m) Whelan v. Couch, supra. (») Bunacleugh v. Poolman, 3 Daly (N.Y.) 236: Laveque v. Nava- rine, 52 Vt. 267. 118 CONDiriOXAL SALES ACT. (3) This section does not apply to a bailment wherein the goods when sold were sold for less than $30, but, never- theless the goods, no matter what was the price therefor, have still to be retained by the bailor, when possession is retaken, for a period of twenty days, as provided for by section 8 ante jiage 104. (4) See ante page 104, note (5). (5) This means five clear days " where there is given to a party a certain space of time to do some act, which space of time is included between two other acts to be done by another person, both the days of doing the acts ought to be excluded in order to insure to him the whole of that space of time. Here is a case in which one party (the bailor) is required to give notice to another (the bailee), a certain time before a particular act can be done by the former; the party to whom the notice is given cannot fix the period of the day when it is to be given :" but the Act of Parliament allows him five days, as an intervening period within which he may deliberate whether he will do a certain act, viz., redeem, and unless you exclude both the first and the last day you do not give him the whole five days for that purpose, (a) If the statute had said five days at least, then it would be apparent beyond question that five complete days were meant to be given, (6) but "a day is a day whether 'at least' be added or not." (c) It is to be observed however, that while the words " at least" are omitted in reference to the period of five days, they are used in the same section in defining the period of " seven days " which must elapse after depositing the notice in the post office. " Seven days at least " mean seven clear days, (d) (a) Alderson, B., Young v. Uiggon, 6 M. & W. at p. 54. (6) Zouch V. Dempsey, 4 B. & Aid. 522. (c) Littledale, J., Regina v. Justices' of Shropshire, 8 Ad, & Ell. 173 : see Young v. O'Rielly, 24 TJ. C, Q. B. 172 : Stadacona Fire & Life Ins. Co. V. Macken::ic. 2i> C. P. 10 : Hans v. Johnston. 3 O. R.IOO. (d) Remohr v. Marx, 19 Can. Law Jour. 10. SECTION NINE. 119 The five days here mentioned may be five of the days of the twenty, during which twenty days the goods or chattels must be kept so as to permit of redemption, but in order to so compute the period of five days, the necessary notice must be given not later than on the fourteenth day of the twenty days so as to allow the last of the five days to expire before the end of the term of twenty days. (6) The following is a form of notice which may be adopted. To , of SiK:— Xotice is hereby given you that, at the expiration of live clays from the day of service of this notice upon you, to wit : upon day of , 188 I shall proceed to sell the following goods or chattels, namely, (describe the property) at in the of , in the county of The said goods or chattels were taken possession of by me, on account of the breach of condition in the conditional sale or promise of sale thereof by me to you. If you desire to redeem the said goods or chattels you are at lilicrty to do so, at any time within twenty days after the day of (the day of taking possession) on payment of the sum of $ being the amount in arrear on such conditional sale together with interest and actual costs and expenses of taking possession which have been incurred. Dated this day of . 18 (7) It must not be inferred from the words of the statute that the goods must be sold, but only, if sold, then a certain notice of the intended sale must be given. The bailee is given twenty days from the taking possession by the bailor within which to redeem, a right he cannot deprive himself of, so that the bailee cannot be heard to complain at a sale being made after the time for redemption has elapsed without the right of redemption being exercised. (8) The notice should be, not only of the intended sale. but of the intended place of sale. for. without the latter, a notice could hardly be said to be a notice of an intended sale. (9) See ante page 46, note (3). (10) There are three difl'erent means of effecting service. 120 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. (i) Personal service, which of course is the safest and surest, and therefore the best method to be adopted. (ii) Service bj- mail; that is, by depositing in the post office a registered letter containing the notice, addressed to the bailee at his last known post office address in Canada. (iii) Service at the bailee's residence or last known place of abode in Ontario. (11) Personal service is only dispensed with in the event of absence of the bailee, etc., that is absence from his resi- dence or last known place of abode in Ontario, (e) Absence of the bailee from the place whereof he is described in the instrument is not necessarily absence from his residence, because the description in the instrument, at most, is but prima facie evidence of the residence of the bailee, (f) Though personal service can be effected, such does not appear to be compulsory, when the alternative method of service by mail is adopted. But if the post is made the means of service, strict care must be exercised in complying with the statute. The letter must be addressed to the last known post office address of the bailee in Canada. If the bailee is known to have left, and to be residing out of Canada, a notice addressed to his last known address in Canada would scarcely be deemed sufficient. In such a case it would be advisable to leave the notice at the bailee's last known place of abode in Ontario. The letter must be registered and it must be deposited in the post office at least seven days before the last day of the five previously mentioned (g) would expire. Thus if the five days would elapse on the 30th of the month, the notice must be mailed and registered on or before the 13th of the same month, (h) It is not safe to conclude that a man's residence is at the place whereat his family reside. Nor is it conclusive as to a man's residence to fix it of the place whereat his family (e) See Marr v. Corporation of Vienna. 10 L. J. 275. (f) Miller v. Van Norman. 13 Q. B. 461. (g) Ante p. 47. note (4). (h) See ante p. 3, notes (i), (5), (fiK section 2. note (5). SECTION TEK. 121 reside, (i) There may be a constructive residence, as well as actual residence. Absence of the bailee from his con- structive residence would not entitle the bailor to dispense with personal service. (;') A person may have more than one residence. If he has houses in different places at each of which he keeps an establishment, each may be called his residence though he may not go there for years, (fc) By section 8 the period of twenty days must in all cases elapse after possession taken to permit of the bailee redeem- ing should he be so disposed. This section provides a course which must be pursued should the bailor wish to sell the prop- erty after taking possession, but that the bailor may not be compelled to hold the property any longer than twenty days, the proceedings leading up to sale may all be taken within that period, though the sale cannot take place until its ex- piration. 10. (1) Where any goods or chattels (1) subject to the provisions of this Act are affixed to any realty (2) without the consent in writing of the owner of the goods and chattels, such goods and chattels shall notwithstanding- remain so subject. (.3'l but the owner of such realty, or any purchaser, or any mortgagee, or other incum- brancer on such realty, shall have the right as against the manu- fecturer, bailor or vendor of such goods or chattels, or any person claiming through or under them, to retain the said goods and chattels upon payment of the amount due and owing thereon. (2) The provisions of this section are to be deemed as retroactive and shall apply to past as well as to future transactions. 60 Vic. cap. 3, sec. 3 : cap. 14, sec. 80. (1) It is to be noticed that the words used in this section are " goods and chattels," whereas in section one the word " chattels " alone is used. Of the two words, the word chattel, ordinarily speaking, has a wider significance, btit its meaning is much circumscribed by section one {ante, p. 1). (i) Miller v. Van Gorman, suprn : see Bank of Toronto v. Fanning, n Chy. 514 : LaPlante v. G. T. R. Co.. 26 Q. B. 479. (j) Queen, v. ^'ice-('hn■ncellor of Oxford, 7Q. B. 471. (h) Walcott V. Botfield. Kay 534. 18 Jur. 570. 122 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. Prior to the 1st January, 1907, it is only as to manufac- tured goods or chattels (ante. p. 11) that this section has any application, and up to then it has no application to any article comprehended within the definition of household furniture except a piano, an organ or other musical instru- ment (section 2, ante, p. 73). Ci) Wliat constitutes annexation to the realty is an ex' tremely wide question; but, inasmuch as when annexed the owner of the realty can only retain the chattel on paying for it, and when not annexed he can have no claim upon it under the Act, the question of what is sufficient to constitute annexation is not a matter of much concern, at least to the vendor, except, of course, when the act of annexation destroys the legal identity of the article annexed. If it is not annexed the vendor takes it ; if it is annexed he still takes it, if the owner of the realty refuses to pay for it. Yet a question whether there has or has not been annexation is important because according as the answer is ' Yes ' or ' No,' so there is or is not an option in the owner of the realty to buy the article. The owner of the chattel might wish to repossess the chattel, but this he could not do if the owner of the realty decided to retain it, and pay for it. If annexation has taken place, then the owner of the chattel would be obliged on payment to forfeit his right to it. This privilege in the owner of the realty, when he chooses to exercise it, will give to the words " affixed to any realty '" a wider significance than is ordinarily understood by annexa- tion. In other words, what might not be an "affixing to the realty '' as against the owner of the chattel, might still be an annexation ^vithin the statute. Thus it was at one time (1851) considered that chattels did not become fixtures when they were attached slightly so as to be capable of re- moval without the least injury to the fabric of the building or to themselves, and the object of the annexation was not to improve the inheritance, but to render the machines steadier and more capable of convenient use as chattels; (a) and, of course, if these principles still prevailed, an owner ((I) /lilliiwrU Y. Eistioood, 6 Ex. 295. SEOTKIN TEN. 128 of the realty would not enjoy the statutory option of keeping such chattels on payment to the vendor. But now it is held that the circumstance that the fastening is merely to steady the machines when in use is not inconsistent with tlie infer- ence that the ohject is permanently to improve the freehold. In fact the machine without such - steadying could not be effectually used, and therefore it was clearly necessary. While the object of fixing is to ensure steadiness and to keep the machine in place when wanted, the same can be said, probably, of most trade fixtures. (&) and thus the owner of the realty would enjoy his rights under this statute. While machinery slightly attached, merely to steady it. {V-) may lose its character as a chattel, machinery which at all times requires to be firmly fixed to the freehold for the purpose for which it is worlced, may never lose its character as a moveable chattel; (c) and thus the rights of the owner of the realty in the exercise of his option of retaining the chattel under this statute be as difficult of ascertainment as the question of fixtures is difficult of solution. Only general rules can be offered. By reason of the diversity of conditions, the vast variety of forms in which machinery can be used, the multi- tude of objects to which machinery is put, the constantly continuing improvements with which modern ingenuity sup- plies the ever changing and growing demands of busy people, these principles are often perhaps more reliable in their breach than in their application. Simply as a guide and only as such, it may be said that the object of the annexation and the purposes to which the premises are applied may be regarded, and if the object of setting up machinery is to enhance the value of the premises, or to improve them for the purposes for' which they are being used, and if the machinery is affixed to the realty, however slightly, but in such a way as is appropriate to its use indicating a perman- ent rather than an occasional affixing, then both as to the degree of annexation and as the object of it, it may be con- (6) Longbottom v. Berry, L. R 5 Q. B. 12-3. (7/) Ooldie d- McCuIloch v. Heirson, 35 N. B. Reps. 349. (c) Longiottom v. Berry, siiprn. 124 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. eluded that the machinery has become part of the realty, (d) Again, though injury may result by the removal and de- taching an article from the realty, the injury does not in all cases control the character of the chattel, but few cases will be found in which an article, the removal of which involves material injury to the realty, has been considered to be a chattel in the absence of a governing agreement, (e) As injury by removal is sometimes the controlling factor (for the amount of damage that would be done by removing the article may be so great as to prevent the removal;) (f) so in some cases is the mode of annexation; (g) and in some cases it is the only factor in deciding the question whether a chattel has or has not become a fixture, (h) and yet, as compared with considerations arising from the character and purpose of the article in relation to the use of the realty, the mode of annexation becomes of minor importance, (i) Then the convenience when in use, of a chattel, may decide its char- acter, for it may be of no use unless attached as part of the realty; or it may be only more conveniently used by being so attached. (;) Thus a machine held to the freehold by cleats that it may the more conveniently be worked, is not sufficient to make the machine part of the realty, (h) For when belting is used for a similar purpose; (Z) but belting itself is a fixture when necessary for communicating the motive power from the engine; (m) but a cotton gin was held to be part of the realty, because its use would be much (d) King, J., Haggart v. Brampton, 28 S. C. R. at p. 182. (e) Ex p. Moore Banking Co., 14 Ch. Div. 379: Wake v. Hall, Jj. R. 8 App. 195: McCausland v. McGalUim, 3 Ont. R. 305- Markle v HoiK-k, 19 IT. C. Q. B. 146. (f) Wake V. Hall. L. R. 8 App. Cases at p. 205. (g) Wiltshear v. Cottrell, 1 El. & Bl. 674. (7^) Toicne v. Flfk. 127 Mass. 125, 34 .Am. Rep. S53. (i) McRea v. Central Nat. Bank. 66 N. Y. 495: Feder v. Van Winkle, 53 N. J. Bq. 870. (/) Garscallen v. Moodie, 15 U. C. Q. B. 304 : Bannell v. Tupper, 10 U. C. Q. B. 414 : Longlottom v. Berry. L. R. 5 Q. B. 123. (fc) Sim Life Assce. Go. v. Taylor (1893), 9 Man. R. 89. (!) Longhottom v. Berry, supra: Sun Life v. Taylor, xujira. (m) Qooderham ^. Denholm. 18 U. C. Q. R. 203. SECTION TEN. 125 lessened unless attached, and its gearing in consequence passed with it. (n) So that the convenience when in use appears to be a matter of degree. Then the permanent use and improvement of land is an important considera- tion: (o) for if chattels, when affixed, give to the land its chief value, the prevailing view is that the chattels then be- come fixtures: thus a cider mill annexed to an orchard with the view of its permanent enjoyment passes with the land; (p) and land, with an inexhaustible supply of stone, gives to a stone-mill erected thereon a permanent character, and it too passes with the land; (q) but, on the other hand, a ferry-boat run by a chain, the chain being supported by biioys and fastened to land, is held to be a chattel, because the whole is not intended for the permanent improvement of the land, (r) Whatever in fact is placed in a building to carry out the obvious purpose for which it was erected, or to permanently increase its value for occupation, is part of the realty, (s) But chattels which are merely incidental to the particular business carried on at the time, and which can be used in one place as well as in another, and which add nothing to the building, though they may be of advantage to the businesses conducted there, are said to be personal property and not fixtures, (t) " It would seem that when a building is erected for a par- ticular purpose, and machinery is placed therein to effectuate that purpose, and is reasonably necessary therefor, and is m some substantial manner attached to the land or the build- ing, and consequently to the freehold, so as to give one the idea of permanency, and to evince an intention of making a (n) McKenna v. Hammond, 30 Am. Dec. 366, see Wake v. Hall t, R. 8 App. 204. (o) Haggeri v. Brampton, supra. (p) Wadleigh v. Irwin, 41 N, H. 503. (q) Davis v. Morgan, 56 Mo. App. 311. (r) Cowart v. Con-art, 3 Leer (Tenn.) 57. (s) Lentlridge Sav. Bank v. Exeter Mad. Works, 127 JIass. 542. (t) Chase v. Tacoma Box Co., 11 Wash. 377. 116 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. fixture of it, the courts incline to regard such machinery as part of the realtjr. irrespective of weight or size, unless the size be such that the machine cannot be removed without removing or damaging the building." (u) " The general principle to be kept in view, underlying all questions of this kind, is the distinction between the busi- ness which is carried on in or upon the premises, and the premises, or locus hi quo. The former is personal in its nature, and articles that are merely accessory to the business, and have been put on the premises for this purpose, and not as accessions to the real estate, retain the personal char- acter of the principal to which they appropriately belong and are subservient. But articles which have been annexed to the premises as accessory to it. whatever business may lie carried on upon it, and not peculiarly for the benefit of a present business, which may be of a temporary duration, become subservient to the realty and acquire and retain its legal character." {v) Another test is that when the annexation is for the benefit of the machine and not for the benefit of the freehold, then the machine retains its character as personalty; (tr) hence it is that machinery furnishing motive power is part of the realty to which it is attached; {x) while machinery merely accessory to a building may or may not become part of the realty, according as the building is or is not erected for or permanently devoted to the particular purpose, for the carry- ing out of which purpose, the machinery is so annexed, or according as the moveable and immoveable property are both vested in the same person. («/) Sometimes build- ings are sold and carried to the spot intended for («) Per Bird, V.C, in Rodd-y v. Uriel-, 42 N. J. Eq. 2i:.j. (v) Fortmaii- v. Cocppcr. 14 Ohio St. 558, quoted in ]\ugnrr \. Cleveland, etc., R. Co., 22 Ohio St. 563, 10 Am. Rep. 770. (mi) Keefer v. Merrill. 6 App. R. 121. (x) Boyd, v. STwrrocl;, 37 L. J. Ch. 114, L. R. 5 Eq. 72 : Walmsity V. Milne. 7 C. B. K. S. US: J;i!rl;c v. Taylor. 46 U. C. Q. B. 371. (y) Carscallen v- Itoodie. 15 U. C. Q. B. .304: Gardiner v. Parker, 18 Cliy. 26: Diekunn v. Biinter. 29 Chy. 73. SECTION TEN. I"i7 them and there placed. Independently of actual fasten- ing, biiildings so placed may or may not be fixtures (y^). If accessory to the land in the sense of being there for the pur- pose of improving it as a permanent improvement, or for the purpose of better enjoying the land itself, (:) then the build- ing is treated as part of the land; (a) but if the building be of little value, and is of a decidedly temporary character, even though the soil may be somewhat levelled to make for it a suitable foundation, it retains its character as personalty. The description of the article is for the jury, and they hav- ing answered, then it is for the Judge to say whether, ac- cording te the fact found, the article is or is not a fixture. Fences, especially wire fences, may be a manufactured article {ante, p. 13). If they are, then they come within the purview of the Act, and can be sold under and by way of a conditional sale. If sold to a vendee who places the fence on his own land, then little difficulty arises, at least so long as the vendee of the fence and the owner of the land are the same person. But, should the vendee of the fence sell the land to an innocent purchaser, the latter may be preferred or deferred to the right of the conditional vendor, according as this Act is or is not complied with. A fence, even a rail fence, is generally considered to be part of the realty, and cannot be replevied as personal property by one who wrongfully builds it upon the land of another; for, when so built, it becomes the property of that other, and once having so vested, the latter can remove it and dispose of it as his own. This is so, though the fence is attached only by its own weight, (&) as is the case with the common rail fence, which, judged by the test of the intention, has never been doubted i,< part of the (l/i) Leonard v. Willard, Q. R. 23 S. C. 482. (s) Walce r. Eall, L. R. S App. Cases at p. 204. (a) Bimnell v. Tupper, 10 U. C. Q. B. 414: Phillips v. Grand River F. M. Ins. Co. (1881), 46 tJ. C. R. 334: Cleaver v. CuUodeii, 14 TJ. C. Q. B. 491 : Bald v. Hagar, 9 C. P. 382 : Shebonean v. Beaver il. Fire Ins. Co., 33 U. C. Q. B. 1. 30 U. C. Q. B. 472: Cameron V. Hniiici: .34 U. C. Q. B. 121; Miles v. Aiil-atell 211 Out. 21. (5) Ewell on Fixtures. 302. 128 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. realty, (c) A temporary or accidental detachment of the fence does not deprive it of its character of realty. But material about to be used, but not yet used, even though de- posited along the line of the proposed fence, in the construc- tion of a fence, does not lose its character of personal pro- perty until annexed to the land, (d) By virtue of this statute it would seem the ov?ner of the land cannot retain the fence sold to his vendor by the latter's conditional ven- dor, and found upon the land when he purchased it, and so placed without the written consent of the conditional vendor, without payment of the amount due and owing thereon. A chattel annexed to realty still remains a chattel in favor of its owner, though its removal might injure the freehold, (e) It does not become "immobilized." But if injury would result to the freehold, the owner of the realty can, it is submitted, under' the statute, successfully contend that the chattel is afSxed to the realty; that it is immobil- ized so as to hold it, against the owner, on his paying for it; for, as was said by Lord Hardwicke, in Lawton v. Lawton, (/) " You shall not destroy the principal thing by taking away the accessory to it." In other words, if the transaction is outside of the Act, a chattel may be affixed to the realty, and yet not become immobilized; whereas, with exactly the same conditions existing, if the Act applies, the chattel may be claimed to be affixed, so that the owner of the land may exercise the option given hiin by the Act of keeping the chattel on paying for it. A manufacturer, bailor, or vendor of chattels, prior to the enactment of this section, could not be defeated in his right to property, within the meaning of the Act, by the bailee or vendee annexing the chattel to realty, so as in all other respects, to make the chattel part of the realty, and if the owner of the soil sought to retain that which has been so (c) Spragge, Y.C'., McDonald ^. Weeks, at p. 310. (d) Mott V. Palmer, 1 N. Y. 564: Ewell on Fixtures, 302. (e) Am. & Eng. Enc. of Law, vol. 13, p. 002. (f) A. & K. 15. SECTION TKN. 129 improperly affixed to his land, by one who had not the legal title to the thing so affixed, he would have to pay for it. (g) This is still the ease to the extent of compelling the owner of the soil to pay for the chattel ; {h) but it talces away from the owner of the chattel his former legal right to take the chattel if he so desired. The statxite, in fact, leaves the option with the owner of the soil whether he will keep the chattel and pay for it, or give the chattel up, an option he did not possess prior to the passing of this Act. In dealing with fixtures, the intention in regard thereto decides their character, and the intention is indicated by two circumstances, viz., the degree of annexation and the object of annexation, (i) These two circumstances are such as to be patent to all, and so, the intention that guides is not the secret intention of one party or the other, or of both, or such that rests in mere agreement, but it is the legal inten- tion to be gathered from the surrounding circumstances, as, for example, the kind of article, its mode of attachment to the realty, the purpose for which it was put in its place, the enhancing the value of the premises or improving its useful- ness for the purpose for which it is used, the circumstance even of the property being of a temporary and unsightly character, and the agreement and understanding between the parties at the time of placing the structure upon the realty, (y) And, likewise, a mere expressed intention to sever a fixture from the realty and sell it in ease another will buy it, even though communicated to that other, will not operate to convert a part of the freehold into a chattel or to alter ig) Stevens Man. Co. v, Barfoot, 9 O. R. 692. {h} McEntire v. Grossley (1895) A. C. 457, 40i. (i) Thomas v. Inglis, 1 Ont. R. 588 : Holland v. Ilodgson. L. R. 7 C. P. 328 : Haggart v. The Town of Brampton, 28 S. C. R. 174 : Ke'efer v. Merrill. Out. A. R. 121 : Uoran v. Willard, 14 N. B. R. 358: Fowler v. Fowler, 15 X. B. R. 488; Philips v. Grand Rivcr.'i /•'. Milt. F. Ins. Co.. 46 U. C. Q. B. 334; Hoh.wn v. Gorringe (1897) 1 Ch. 182, at p. 193. (;■) Miles v. Ankctele, 29 Ont. R. 25. reversed in appeal 25 O. A. R. 458; Haggart v. Brampton, 2S Can. S. C. R. 174. B.C.A. — 9 130 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. its character in any way. (fc) And when there is an absence of intention to sever the machinery from the freehold, a mortgage of the land will cover the machinery and even the leathern driving belts used in working the machinery which pass with the realty, as does the key of a door pass with the house. (Z) And the mortgagee, who has lent his money on the security of real estate to" which is affixed a chattel — a furnace for example — may, if the furnace is removed and sold by the mortgagor, follow and take it, even from the pos- session of an innocent purchaser, (m) An instrument under this Act, executed in view that the chattels are about to be annexed to the realty, is regarded as sufficient evidence of the intention and agreement of the parties that they retain their character as personal property, which they do. (re) When the intention exists, then a bailee cannot, by annexing the chattel, alter its character, (o) And the statute says, notwithstanding any annexation, the chattel shall remain a chattel subject to the foregoing option in the owner of tfie realty, provided of course it is in the first place a chattel covered by the Act. The absolute owner of chattels cannot attach them to the freehold of another, and afterwards be heard to claim that the chattels so annexed are not fixtures, (p) But, if some one other than the owner of the goods attaches them to the freehold, and the Owner of the (fc) MinUmrick v. Joly, 29 Ont. E. 238. (I) Dewar V. Mallory, 16 Gr. 618. (m) American Investment Co. v. Sexton, 20 Out. R. 77- Stockwell V. Gainplute, 29 Conn. 362. (») Jones on Mortgages, p. 111. Am. & Bng. Enc. of Law, vol. 13, p. 625. Holson v. Gorringe (1897) 1 Oh. 182: D'Eyncourt v. Gregory, L. R. 3 Eq. 382 : Holland v. Hodgson, L. R. 7 C. P. 328 : Hoison V. Gorringe, 66 L. J. Ch. 114 (1897) 1 Ch. 192 : Haggert v. Brampton, 28 O. E. R. 180 : Keefer v. Merrill, 6 O. A. 'R. 121 : Doran V. Willard, 14 New Bruns. 358: Fowler v. Foivler, 15 New Bruns. 488 : Phillips v. Grand River F. M. F. Insce. Co , 46 U O Q B 834. (o) D'Eyncourt v. Gregory, L. R. 3 Eq. 382. (p) Stephens v. Barfoot, 13 A. R. 360: Laine v. Bcland, 21 S. C. R. 419 : Poison v. OcGeer, 12 Ont. R. at p. 280 : Joseph Hall Mang. Co. V. Hadelt, S 0. R. 465 : 11 A. R. 749 : Leonard v. Boisvert, 10 Que. S. C. 343. SECTION TEN. 131 realty seeks to escape payment therefor, and still hold them as his own, he must produce the consent in writing of the owner of the goods to such attachment, before he can do so. Generally speaking, a sale of fixtures is a sale of chattels, (q) Even fixtures of a nature that the vendor must know, in order to be made use of, must necessarily be built into, and become part of the building, none the less retain their character of chattel property in favor of a vendor thereof who retained in himself the right of property in the fixtures notwithstanding the rule " quicquid plantatur solo, solo cedit." (r) The right of recaption exists so long as the property re- tains its legal identity, (s) subject, however, to the exercise of the statutory option by the owner of the realty ; but, if he seeks to keep the property without paying for it, he renders himself liable, not, however, in action for conversion, but in detinue, for trover will not lie for fixtures while they remain attached to the freehold; (t) and a demand by the vendor and refusal by the person in whose possession they are is sufficient to entitle the vendor to bring an action to recover the chattels, (u) The form of Judgment is to the effect that the chattel is the property of the plaintiffs, and that the defendant detains the same and doth permit the plaintiff to remove the same, failing which, as an alternative relief, the plaintiffs do recover for the wrongful detention, the amount (g) Holier v. Riinder, 1 C. M. & R. 266: Helliwell \. Easticood 6 Exch. 812. (r) Oough v. Wood, (1894) 1 Q. B. 713: Bobson v. Gorriiige, (1897) 1 Ch. 182: La Banque d'Hoehelaga v. Wateroas Co., 27 .C. S. R. 406 : Central Branch R. W. Go. v. Fritz, 27 Am. Rep. 175 :" Hall Manfg. Co. v. Haslett, infra. (s) Hall Manfg. Co. v. Uazlett, 11 A. R. 749: Howell v. Listowel Rink and Park Co., 13 O. R. 470 ; Waterous Co. v. Henry, 2 Man R 169. (<) Oate,s V. Cameron, 7 U. C. R. 228: England v. Cowley, li. R. 8 Ex. 120. («) Burton, J.A., in Hall Manfg. Go. v. Haslett, 11 A. R. at p. 132 CONDITIONAL SALKS ACT. assessed, or to be assessed as damages, (v) The simple act of annexation to the freehold does not Justify the inference that the chattel becomes the property of the freeholder, where the chattel is severable without material injury to itself or to the freehold, for it is always open to inquiry under what circumstances the chattel was annexed, and whether an agree- ment did or did not exist under which the owner would be entitled to take it. (w) The maxim " quicquid plantatur solo, solo cedit " cannot be invoked unless there be such a fixing to the soil as reasonably to lead to the inference that it was intended to be incorporated with the soil, (x) If the cir- cumstances are such as to indicate that articles, attached to the freehold by nothing more than their own weight, are still to be part and parcel of the freehold, then they are fix- tures to the realty, (y) otherwise they are not, hence it will be seen that the option given by the statute to the owner of the freehold, depends upon the circumstances surrounding the placing of the articles upon the land. A question, of ten arises as to the character of parts of or accessories to articles or structures which are attached to the freehold, for example, the fork which is part of or accessory to the patent hay fork. The fork itself is detachable, but the remainder or principal part is fixed to the barn or stable in which it is used. The whole is sold under a conditional sale agreement. Notwithstanding annexation the title remains in the vendor, but he cannot deprive the owner of the free- hold under this section of the statute of the right to retain the fork on paying for it, because it is detached from the freehold, and therefore not a fixture. " Where, in the case of machinery, the principal part becomes a fixture by actual annexation to the soil, such part of it as may not be so physic- (v) Poison V. Degeer, 12 Ont. R. 275: Vulcan Iron Works Co. V. Rapid City Co., (1884) 9 Man. R. 577, 587. (w) Lancaster v. Eve, 5 C. B. K. S. 717. (x) Williams, J., Lancaster v. Eve, 5 C. B. N. S. 717. (y) Can. Perm. L. & H. Co. v. ilcrchants Bank, 3 Man. R. 2S5 : Keefer v. Merrill, G Ont. App. R. 121 : Holland v. Hodgson, L. R. 7 C. P. 334: Haggart v. Bram/jton, 28 S. C. R. at p. 180. SECTION TEN. 133 ally annexed, but which if removed would leave the principal thing unfit for use, and would not of itself and standing alone be well adapted for general use elsewhere, is considered constructively annexed," and acdordingly crates, cupping machines and work tables, " not actually annexed," but essen- tially necessary to the working of the principal machinery were held to pass as part of the realty, a canning factory, (z) So detachable wheels belonging to a polishing machine were held to partake of the character of the machine, (a) and loom beams laid upon the looms, when in use, were held to possess the character of the looms, (&),and in the same way lathes, bending machines, Bradley forges, a Daniel's planer, dyna- moter scales, the watchman's clock, are constructively an- nexed, because they are necessary parts of fixed machines, (c) neither being practically available for the purpose for which it was used, without the other, because, in fact, such things are parts of a whole, as duplicate sets of rolls belonging to a rolling machine, {d) or duplicate cylinders for a bluing machine, and duplicate pulleys for grindstones, (e) and keys to the fixed locks of a door swinging on its hinges; (/) but a copying press and table, anvils, an iron clamp for making engine wheels, a band sawing machine and saws therewith, belting, a platform scale on wheels, fire hose and fire hose reel with its hose, tools and couplings, brass nozzles and branches, cannot be said to be constructively annexed, and therefore could not be claimed by the owner of the realty on payment thereof by him, under this section as against the conditional vendor who sold them {g). (z) Dudley v. Hurst, 67 Md. 441 : 1 Am. St. Rep. 368. (a) Pierce v. George, 108 Mass. 78: 11 Am. Rep. 310. (6) Hopewell Mills v. Taunton S. Bank, 150 Mass. 519: 15 Am. St. Rep. 235 : Gooderham v. Denholm, 18 U. C. R. 203 : see 15 Q. B. D. 358, L. R. 5 Q. B. 133 : Haggart v. Brampton. (c) Haggart v. Brampton, infra. (d) Ex p. Ashlury, L. R. 4 Ch. 630. (e) Delaware R. Co. v. Oxford Iron Co., 36 X. I. Eq. 452. (f) Liford's Case, 11 Coke: Bishop v. Elliott, 11 Exch. 113: see Gooderham v. Denholm, 18 U. C. Q. B. 203. (g) Haggart v. Brampton, 28 S. C. R. 174: see Gooderham v. Denholm, supra. 134 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. Where an industry is carried on, as mining, and the ma- chinery and buildings are intended to be accessory to the mining, and not accessory to the soil, then the machinery and buildings are personal chattels and nol part of the realty, even though the foundations are below the surface of the soil, and without some disturbance to the soil, the structures could not be removed, (h) Transactions, however, under this statute are not subject to much of the confusion that arises in defining the character as a fixture or no fixture, because the statute limits the transactions to those wherein the property or title shall not pass to the vendee until the performance by him of the con- dition imposed, and, as we have seen, the annexation of the chattel thus sold to the realty of the purchaser cannot render it part of the realty (except in the Province of Quebec, per- haps, where the article is of that character destined from its inception to become part of the realty), and irrevocable. The right is implied of removing it upon failure in the ven- dee to perform the condition. But where dispute may arise is, by reason of this section, granting a certain privilege to the owner of the realty, he not being the ven- dee of the chattel, according as the chattel is or is not aflBxed to the realty, and, therefore, according as it may or not be a fixture, and to the extent that it may be detached to- enforce this privilege, so may it be necessary to pass upon the question of fixture or no fixture. It is not literally correct to say that whatsoever is annexed to land of another without his consent becomes his property. Such is not the extent of the maxim " quicquid plantatur solo, solo cedit" but rather, and literally, " whatever is affixed to the soil, belongs to the soil." The property in the ma- terials still remains the property of him who owned them as chattels, though by annexation the materials become part of the soil, and, therefore, if by any cause the chattels become severed from the freehold, the owner of them may take them. (A) Wake v. Hall, L. E. 8 App. Cases at p. 205. SECTION TEN. 135 (h^) " The maxim cited is to be found in the works of Gains, and probably he was quoting an older maxim. And the passage in which he uses it is incorporated in the Digest, book 41, title I., "De acquirendo rerum dominio." In the 7th section of that title is a great deal of very able reasoning as to what should be the law as to property where one person has changed the nature of the thing belonging to another, by bestowing his labor on it, as, for instance, where one has turned the silver of another into a vase, his block of marble into a sta- tue, or his grapes into wine. That question is not material here; and then in the 10th law of the 7th section it is said (I translate the Latin), "If one on his own land has erected a building with materials belonging to another, he is the owner (dominus) of the building, for all that is built into the soil becomes part of it, ' quia omne quod inaedificatur solo cedit.' But this is not so that he who was the owner of the materials ceases to be the owner thereof ; but, nevertheless he (the owner of the material) cannot bring an action to recover in specie, nor take them away himself (' nee viir dicare earn potest neque ad exhibendum de ea agere ' ) , be- cause of that law of the twelve tables, which provides ' ne quis tignum alienum aedibus suis jundum eximere cogatur sed duplum pro eo praeeste.' Therefore if by any cause the building is cast down, the owner of the inaterials can 'nunc earn vindicate et ad exMhendum agere.' " So far from meaning by the maxim that the property which had existed in the materials whilst chattels was lost, and vested in the owner of the soil, the maxim is used when Gains, and the framers of the Digest who adopted his opinion, thought that the property in the materials remained in the person who was owner of them whilst chattels, and did not vest in the owner of the building, though by the annexation the ma- terials had become part of the soil, and though by the posi- tive law of the twelve tables he was obliged to leave the building untouched on being paid double the value of the materials." {V) See the interesting consideration given to tliis maxim by Blackburn, L.J., in TTofce v. Ball, L. R. 8 App. 195. 136 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. (3) If the consent in writing is given of the owner of the goods — that is — the person in whom is retained the property in them, then annexation to the freehold may give rise to just such a question as is dealt with in the next preceding pages ; but, instead of the contention being on the part of the owner of the realty, the contention may be on the part of the owner of the chattel, that notwithstanding his consent, the article so annexed did not become part of the realty in the sense of being a fixture, and he is therefore entitled to it. In other words, that the statute means affixed to the realty, so as to iecome a fixture? Owing to the varied conditions of annex- ation, questions of this kind may frequently arise. What this means is that if the conditional vendee affixei' the chattel sold to him by his conditional vendor to the realty, without the consent in writing of the latter, then that the ■ chattel shall be subject to the law as if the section had never been passed — the vendor may take it. or he may sue for it and the judgment would be that the chattel is the property of the plaintiff, that the defendants are detaining the same and that they do permit the plaintiff, by themselves, their servants or agents, to remove the same on demand at the locus in which they are placed; and failing this, as an alternative, that he does recover against the defendant, for the vprongful deten- tion, the amount assessed or to be assessed as damages : and that upon removal the defendant do pay to the plaintiff any damages he mayi have to pay to the owner of the realty to repair any damage he may do to the realty in the removal of the chattel, (i) This is only embodying by way of statute that which is the law, and has always been the law without the statute. The inference from the language might be, that if the vendee has such written consent, the chattel shall cease to remain subject to the Act, but this would produce such startling results that this inference must not aid or sug- gest its meaning. Many chattels sold would be utterly useless unless annexed to the realty, and the writing evidencing the (i) Vulcan Iron Worlm v. Rapid City Co., 9 Man. R. 577, 587: Cameron, C.J., I'ouhon v. Degeer, 12 Out. R. at p. 282. SECTION TEN. 137 transaction implies consent to annexation, if it does not ex- pressly say so. In such cases it could not be that the con- ditional vendor lost his right at common law, or under the statute. The statute says consent in writing. But surely he who would seek to benefit by the consent not being in writing, could not deprive others of the result of his verbal consent, if positively given, though not in writing. A person is estopped by his own conduct, if it be clear and explicit, from availing himself of legislative provisions intended for his benefit : (;') and, if a verbal consent is either admitted or proved clearly to have been given and acted on, it is a very intelligible equity to prevent the setting up of the formal provision as to a written consent, (k) But, when one party asserts and the other denies a verbal assent, then in the absence of proof of something being done on the faith of a proved assent, a Court of Equity will not dispense with the written consent. (/) (}) Joyce Y. Booth, 1 B. & P. 97: Cox v. Cameron, 4 Bine. N. C. 453. (fc) Beneker v. Emmany. 28 C. P. at p. 442: Lorecke v. McKay, 29 C. P. 54. (0 Beneker' 'r. Emmany, 28 O. P. at p. 442. 138 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. 6 EDW. VII. CAP. 19. THE STATUTE LAW AMENDMENT ACT, 1906. His Majesty, by and with the advice and consent of the Legislative Assembly of the Province of Ontario, enacts as follows : — (a) See. 33. The Act to amend the Act respecting Con- ditional Sales of Chattels is amended by adding thereto the following as section 2a: — 2a. ^ Eeceipt notes, hire receipts and orders for chattels given by bailors of chattels other than manufactured goods, and chattels where the condition of the bailment Is such that the possession of the chattel passes without any owner- ship therein being acquired by the bailee until the payment of the purchase or consideration money, or some stipulated part thereof, shall only be valid as against subsequent pur- chasers or mortgagees without notice in good faith for valu- able consideration, provided that the bailors or vendors with- in ten days from the execution of the receipt note, hire receipt, order or other instrument evidencing the bailment or conditional sale given to secure the purchase money, or a part thereof, shall file with the clerk of the County Court of the county in which the bailee or conditional purchaser resided at the time of the bailment or conditional purchase, a copy of the said receipt note, hire receipt, or order, or other instrument evidencing the bailment or conditional sale, and no such bailment shall be valid as against such subsequent purchaser, or mortgagee, as aforesaid, unless it is evidenced in writing signed by the bailee or his agent. 34. Subsection 1 of section 6 of the said Act is amended by striking out the word " manufactured " in the fourth and fifth lines thereof.^ (a) Rev. Stat. c. 119 amended. ' See ante page SP>. ' See ante page 91 and p. 95. THE STATUTE LAW AMENDMENT ACT. 139 25. Section 8 of the said Act is amended by adding the words "and keeping'^ after the word "taking" in the eighth line of the said section.^ 26. Sections 33, 24 and 25 of this Act shall not affect or apply to any such receipt note^ hire receipt, or order for chattels made or given prior to the 1st day of January, 1907. ' See ante page 100 and page 113. FORMS EENT AGREEMENT WITH PEIVILEGE OF PURCHASE. , , 19- 1.* This is to Certify, That I have this day hired fnom and said has to me leased, for the term of six months, with the privilege of further retaining as long as the rent is promptly paid, a Cabinet Organ, style No. valued at Dollars; for the use of which I agree to pay to said Dollars per month, payable monthly, in advance, and at that rate for any fraction of a month, at the office of said 2. And in consideration of the renting to me of said In- strument, I hereby agree that it shall be kept at, and not be removed from my premises, viz., without the consent of said, first had in writing; I agree to preserve it carefully, and that when returned to, or otherwise repos- sessed by said it shall be in as good order as when received by me, ordinary wear from careful use excepted. 3. In case of any damage to said instrument by fire, water, or any cause other than careful use, I agree to pay to said the amount of said damage; and in case of the destruction thereof from any cause, to pay the above valua- tion, less any amount of rent which may have been paid. * On the authority of Mason v. Lindsay, L. R. 4 Ont. 365, a transaction covered by the above form, is not within the Act, because the lessee is not bound in such an agreement to purchase the organ in question. APPENDIX — FORMS. 141 4. Provided, however, and these presents are upon the condition, that if I shall fail to perform any of my agree- ments as herein provided, said shall have the right without further notice or demand, to take possession of said Organ and remove the same, and for that purpose to enter any place of mine where said has reason- able cause to believe said Organ to be, without being deemed to have done anything wrongful, and upon such taking, said term and my right to hold or use said Organ shall cease, but without prejudice to the right of said for arrears of rent, if any, or on account of preceding breach of agreement. Signed, Post Office address, 5. I HEREBY AGREE that if said continue to hold said Organ and pay rent therefor, on or before the day it is due, as herein provided, until payments have been made, amounting to the valuation afore- said, said Organ shall become the property of said but until the completion as aforesaid of said payments, said Organ shall remain the property of said 6. For the time any payment is made before it is due, a deduction will be made at the rate of ten per cent, per annum for such time. Residence,- CONDITIONAL SALE OF MACHINEEY, WITH STATE- MENT BY VENDEE OF OWNERSHIP OF LAND. Agreement, made the day of in the year of our Lord one thousand nine hundred and Betwieen of the , , of the first part, and of the of the second 142 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. part, whereby the said agrees to manufacture for the said , in a good workmanlike manner, the following machinery, that is to say: The said party of the first pad; is to be ready to deliver the said machinery free and in good order on the cars on his siding at for station on or about the day of next, after which delivery the same is to be at the risk and expense of the said party of the second part. The said paxty of the first part also agrees, if required by the said party of the second part on receiving reasonable notice of the arrival of the said machinery at the place where the same is to be erected for use, to send a competent work- man to make the connections between boiler and engine, and start the engine running or leave it ready to start. But all other materials and labour of every kind to be provided by the said party of the second part. And the said party of the second part agrees at the proper time and in a convenient manner, to prepare and provide all proper foundations, frames, erections and materials, and a sufficient supply of water convenient to boiler, and all the labour and assistance required for the speedy and convenient erection and putting in running order the said machinery; in default of which, the said party of the first part shall thereupon be freed from further duty or concern in respect of the said machinery. And the said party of the second part agrees to pay for the said machinery to be manufactured and delivered as aforesaid, the sum of Dollars, when ready for delivery, in cash, or by note, payable as follows: and interest on the whole amount unpaid to be paid with each payment, and to furnish good, sufficient and satisfactory security. Provided that if any default shall happen in the payment of any such sums of money, then all the said sums then unpaid, whether due or not, shall immediately become due and payable in like manner and with the like consequences APPENDIX — FORMS. 143 and effects as if the time herein mentioned for payment of such sums had fully come and expired. The property in the said goods shall not pass to the party of the second part until the purchase money and the notes given therefor shall have been fully paid. But the said party of the second part is to have possession and to use the said machinery until default is made in the payment of the price or of some part thereof. Or if any statements herein made are ascertained to be untrue, or if the said party of the second part becomes insolvent, absconds, encumbers, or attempts to, or does dispose of his property herein mentioned, or has his property seized for debt, rent, or taxes, or leaves the machin- ery unprotected, or fails to pay his taxes within seven days after lawful demand made therefor, then and in such case the whole debt immediately becomes due and payable and is to bear interest at per cent, per annum till paid, and the said party of the first part may, at his option, resume possession and recover such costs and damages as he may have incurred in consequence of such default, or of any other cause above stated. And it is further agreed between the said parties, that the said party of the first part shall have a charge upon the lands therein below mentioned for the amount of the said purchase money, until the said notes and all renewals thereof shall have been fully paid. And the said lands are hereby charged with the payment of the said notes and all renewals thereof. This order and acceptance thereof constitute the whole contract between us, and there is no other agreement between us respecting these articles but what is herein expressed. The said party of the second part also agrees to insure the said machinery for not less than two-thirds the amount of the purchase money, and the policy to be made " loss, if any, payable to the party of the first part." And also if he shall require the said party of the first part to superintend the erection of the said machinery as aforesaid, to pay the actual travelling expenses from 144 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. aforesaid and back (including board) of the said party of the first part, his workmen, servants and agents for that purpose; and the said parties also agree that the said party of the first part is not to be responsible in damage or otherwise for any delay or failure in fulfilling the terms of this contract on his part, arising from a strike or strikes of workmen, or from any unforeseen or unavoidable cause. In witness whereof, the parties hereto have hereunto set their hands and seals the day and year first above written. Signed, Sealed and Delivered, \ Seal. in presence of r I Seal. I, the party of the second part in the foregoing agreement men- tioned, own and have a deed of, duly registered in my name, acres of land, it being Lot No. Con- cession Township County the current cash value of which is not less than ? and the same is free and clear of all encumbrance, except and no interest or instalments are in arrear, and I will not sell or further encumber the same until all notes or other indebtedness to the party of the first part are paid, and the said notes or any renewal thereof and said indebtedness, shall be a charge upon the said lands until fully paid, and the said lands are hereby charged with the payment of the said notes or any renewals thereof. I also own personal property, not exempt from execution, of the value of at least $ in excess of all, my debts and liabilities. Dated at the day of FOEM OP HIEE OE EENT BECEIPT WITH RIGHT OF PUECHASE. Received from {name of Vendor in full) here describe the chattel in dclail. APPENDIX FORMS. 145 On hire, for months, at Dollars, per month, payable in advance, the said above described chattel being valued at Dollars, which sum agree to pay in the event of the said instrument being in- jured destroyed by fire or othervi^ise, or not being returned to the said on demand, free of expense, in good order, reasonable wear excepted. And I agree that the said instrument shall uol. be removed from the premises now oc- cupied by me at without notice to and the con- sent of It is agreed, that I may purchase, and I hereby agree to purchase* the said above described chattel for the sum of Dollars, payable as follows: and interest on the unpaid principal at per cent., from date of agreement, but until the whole of the said purchase money be paid, the said instrument shall remain the pro- perty of on hire by me. And, in default of the punctual payment of any instalment of the said purchase money, or of the said monthly rental in advance, may resume possession of the said instrument without any previous demand, although a part of the purchase money may have been paid, or a Note or Accept- ance given by me on account thereof — ^this agreement for sale being conditional, and punctual payment being essential to it; but in the event of the said instrument being so returned to them in good order, any sum received on ac- count of the purchase money, beyond the amount due for rent and any expenses incurred in reference to the said instrunient, will be repaid. On payment in full of purchase money and interest, no rent or hire will be charged. Dated at this day of , 19 (Name) (Address) * See Mason v. Lindsay, L. R. 4 Ont. 365. B.C. A. — 10 146 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. I'ORM OF RELEASE OF RIGHT OF DISTRESS BY LANDLORD UPON CHATTELS PURCHASED BY WAY OP RENT RECEIPT OR OTHERWISE. I the landlord of the house and pxemises rented by hereby release all claim and right of distress for rent now due or which hereafter may become due for the same upon that certain instrument mentioned in an agreement bearing such date herewith hired by the said from Dated the day of , A.D. 19 Witness FORM OF HIRE RECEIPT WITH RIGHT OF PURCHASE. Toronto, 19 This Certifies that I have hired of hereinafter called the Vendors, one Sewing Machine, num- bered style , on the following terms. I have paid this day Dollars, and agree to pay promptly at the office of the said Vendors, at when the same becomes due, without any demand whatsoever to be made therefor, the further sum of Dollars, on the day of each and every month hereafter as a monthly Rent therefor until the sum of Dollars shall have been paid to the said vendors. And I hereby expressly admit that I have examined and tried the said machine, and that it is now in perfect order and condition. And it is expressly understood that until the whole sum of Dollars shall have been paid the said vendors, I will neither part with, nor do I acquire, any title to said APPENDIX FORMS. I'i''' machine; and in case of my failure to pay any of the said amounts above stated within the time aforesaid, I do hereby authorize the said vendors or any of their agents, without process of law, to retake possession of said machine, and with that object to enter any of my premises to search for or obtain the said machine and to remove the same therefrom, using such force as may be necessary for so doing: and I hereby waive and release any right of action which I might other- wise have against the said vendors, or any of their agents, by reason of their procuring or attempting to pi'ocure possession of said machine after default as aforesaid; and I agree to pay all costs and expenses of every kind which may or can arise or accrue to said vendors by reason of such default ; but such taking and removal of said machine shall not relieve me from payment of the rent a>s herein agreed. And it is further agreed, that upon default of payment of any of the above instalments, the whole of the balance of the said sum of Dollars shall immediately become due and payable as rent for the said machine. I also agree not to permit the said machine to be removed from without the written consent of the said vendors, and in the event of the said machine being so re- moved, the said vendors are to be at liberty to repossess the same forthwith, and the whole balance of rent then remain- ing unpaid shall forthwith be due and payable by me. And finally, it is hereby acknowledged that there has not been any alteration or modification of the terms or provisions of this lease, either written or verbal, made by said vendors or any of their agents; and further, that any future modifica- tion of its terms or provisions, to be of any binding effect on said vendors, shall be stated in writing on this lease, and be signed by said vendors. Witness ( Eesidence ] P.O. Address 148 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. KENT AGREEME^;T WITHOUT CONDITIONS OF PUECHASE WHERE LESSORS ASSUME FOR A CASH CONSIDERATION ALL RISKS FROM FIRE. Received from on hire for months, at Dollars per payable in advance. The value of the said is dollars, for which ■ sum I will be responsible, in case of any accident other than fire that may damage or destroy the said instrument; and I further bind myself to return the same, free of expense, in like good order as when received, reasonable wear excepted. And should the above period be extended, this agreement shall continue to be binding. Dated at Ottawa, this day of , 19 RENT AGREEMENT WITHOUT CONDITIONS OF PURCHASE, LOSS BY FIRE TO BE BORNE BY THE LESSEE. Received from Messrs. on hire for months, at Dollars per payable in advance. The value of the said is Dollars, for which sum I will be responsible, in case of fire or any other accident, that may damage or destroy the said instrument; and I further bind myself to return the same, free of expense, in like good order as when received, reasonable wear excepted- And should the above period be extended, this agreement shall continue to be binding. Toronto, 19 APPENDIX — FORMS. 149 KENT AGREEMENT WITH CONDITIONS OF PURCHASE. No. Received from Messrs. , hereinafter called the vendor (describe the chattel) on hire at Dollars per month, payable in advance, the said chattel being valued at Dollars, which sum agree to pay in the event of the said instrument being injured, destroyed, or not being returned to the vendors, on demand, free of expense, in good order, reasonable wear excepted. It is agreed that I may purchase the said for the sum of Dollars, payable as follows: but, until the whole of the purchase money be paid, the said shall remain the property of the vendor, on hire by me. And, in default of the punc- tual payment of any instalment of the said purchase money, at the times above stated respectively, or at any time or times, to which the payment thereof, or any part thereof, may here- after be extended, or of the said monthly rental in advance, the vendor, or his agent or agents, may, without rendering themselves liable to an action or actions for so doing, enter upon the premises where the said may be, and resume possession thereof, without any previous demand, although a part of the purchase money riiay have been paid, or a Note or Notes, Draft or Drafts, given on account thereof, and al- though the same may be then outstanding under discount, this agreement for sale being conditional, and punctual pay- ment being essential to it; but in the event of the said , being so assumed by the vendors, and being returned in good order, any sum received on account of the purchase money, beyond the amount due for rent, and any expenses incurred in reference to the said instrument, is to be repaid to me, and any Notes or Drafts received on account of the purchase money are to be returned to me at maturity. On payment in 150 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. full of purchase money, and interest, no rent or hire is to be charged to me. It is further agreed that this receipt and agreement em- bodies the whole of the agreement between myself and the vendors, with respect to said and I hereby waive all verbal agreements not embodied herein, and agree that I am not entitled to receive credit at any time for any moneys which may be received by the vendors by the discount of any oi the Notes, or Drafts, which may have been taken by them, on account of said purchase money. Dated this day of A.D. 19 Witness / I AGEBEMENT TO SELL UPON CONDITION.* Received from , , on hire for three months, at pen month, payable in advance, the said chattel being valued at , which sum I agree to pay in the event of the said chattel being destroyed, in- jured, or not returned to the said on demand, free of expense, in good order, reasonable wear excepted. It is agreed that I may purchase the said chattel for the sum of , payable as follows: — Three promissory notes payable in one, twelve and twenty-four months from the date hereof. The whole to be paid within the said time with interest at seven per cent, per annum from date. But until the whole of the said purchase money be paid, the said chattel shall remain the property of the said , on hire by me. And in default of the punctual payment of any instal- ment of the said purchase mtfney, or of the said monthly rental in advance, the said may secure possession of the said chattel without any previous demand, although a * This form is taken from Sievenson v. Rice, 24 tJ. C. C. P. 245. APPENDIX — FORMS. 151 part of the purchase money may have been paid, or a note or notes given by me on acconnt thereof, this agreement for sale being conditional, and punctual payment being essential to it. But in the event of the said chattel being so returned to the said in good order, any sum received on account of the purchase money beyond the amount due for rent, and any expenses incurred with reference to the said chattel, vrill be paid. Witness, ) (Signed) ANOTHEE FOE.M. f This agreement made this thirty-first day of August, 1874, between John Whelan of Toronto, saloon-keeper, and Josiah Thomas Couch, of the same place, saloon-keeper. The said Whelan hath agreed to sell, and the said Couch to purchase, the right to use the fixtures of bowling alley in and pertaining to the premises in rear of number sixty-six, on the west side of Jarvis street, in the city of Toronto, as now used by the said Whelan, and access to use the same thereto from Jarvis street, together with the beds, balls and pins only (as the other fixtures and fittings do not pertain to the bargain), for the sum of ten hundred and seventy-eight dollars in gold, payable three hundred and 'fifty dollars in cash at this time, and one hundred and nine dollars on the first day of each of the months of October, Xovember and December next ensuing the date thereof, and the sum of fifty-nine dollars on the first day of January next, 1875; and the further sum in equal payments of nine dollars per month (the first of such pay- ments of nine dollars to be made on the first day of February, 1875), on the first days of each and every month after the said first day of January as aforesaid, until the full balance of said purchase money shall have been paid in full without t Taken from Whelan v. Couch, 26 Grant 74. 153 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. interest. The said Couch to have possession on the first day of September next, but only as in the nature of one subser-' vient to said Whelan, and he is not to have any other right or title to the place, nor is this agreement intended to be complete nor to operate in favour of said Couch until the whole of the said payments have been made, when this right or title shall be considered complete. And in case of default , in the after payments, as above,' or any of them, all matters hereunder are supposed and considered to fall through, and moneys paid hereunder to be forfeited to said Wlielan. It is further agreed that said Couch is to keep the place orderly, quiet, decent and peaceable, and well cleaned, and to close the place at twelve o'clock each night, and open at six o'clock each morning. He shall also keep the place open, in good running order, each and every lawful day and night, and properly managed and looked after, and make it as produc- tive as possible. The players at each alley to have the privilege of playing three balls for the benefit of the house. The place and things pertaining to said alleys passing by this agreement to be insured. The said Couch shall conduct no other business upon said ' premises. Time to be the essence of this agreement. The said beds, balls and pins are not to be removed from said premises until paid for in full. As witness our hands and seals this thirty-first day of August, 1874. John Whelan. [L.S.] J. T. Couch, Jr. [L.S.] APPENDIX — FORMS. 153 FOEM OF PEOMISSOEY NOTE GIVEN FOE PEO- PEETY, THE TITLE AND EIGHT WHEEEIN IS EETAINED BY THE PAYEE. $ 19 On the first day of 19 , for value received I promise to pay to or order at his office in Ontario, the sum of Dollars. The title and right to the possession of the property for which this note is given shall remain in till paid. Witness ANOTHEE POEM. $ Stratford, Ont. 19 On OT before the first day of ' ,19,1 promise to pay to or order, at his office in Stratford, the sum of Dollars, for value received with Interest at seven per cent, per annum until duej and ten per cent, after due until paid. The express condition of the sale and purchase of the machine for which this note is given, is such that the title or ownership thereof does not pass from the said until this note, or notes given in renewal thereof, is paid with in- terest; and should I sell or dispose of my property, he may declare this note due and payable, even before maturity of same, and suit may be entered, tried, and finally dis- posed of in the Court where the office of is located, and he may retake possession of the machine, without pro- cess of law, and sell the said machine at public or private sale, the proceeds thereof to be applied upon the amount unpaid of the purchase price. Witness 154 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. ANOTHEE POEM. % Listowel, Ont. 19 * Months after date I promise to pay or order, at the Dominion Bank here, the sum of Dollars with interest at per cent, from date until maturity, and also after maturity of note until paid for value received. And I agree to the conditions hereunder written. I further agree to furnish security, satisfactory to the payee, at any time, if required. If I fail to furnish such security when demanded, or if I make any default in pay- ment, or should I dispose of my landed property, the payee may then declare the whole price of the article for which the above note is given, due and payable, and suit therefor may be immediately entered, tried, and finally disposed of in the Court in whose division the payee is, and the payee may retake possession of the machinery without process of law and sell it to pay the unpaid balance of the price whether due or not. Subject to the aforesaid provisions I am to have possession and use of the machinery at my own risk. These conditions and agreements are to continue in force until the full payment of the price is made. Witness I hereby acknowledge that I have, on the date of the within note, received from the payee a trne copy of the above agreement. Witness * See Dominion Bank v. Wiggins, 21 Ont. App. R. 275. APPENDIX — FOEMb;. 155 FOEM OF OEDER FOE DELIVERY AND SALE OF SPECIFIC CHATTELS PEOM ONE WHO AGREES TO SELL THE SAME AND NO OTHER WITHIN CERTAIN TERRITOEY. To Gentlemen, — Please enter my order at your regular list price for the season, to be delivered on board the ears at addressed as follows : about the day of , 18 , for which 1 agree to give you my note or notes, payable at your office as. follows: {here describe how notes are to he payable). Implements. ' Number Oedered and Remarks. Here describe the Implements. Territory Freights No travellers are authorized to sell or consign goods on any other terms than those on this sheet. Positively no verbal arrangements recognized. The title and rights to the possession of the property fijr which this sales contract is given shall remain vested in the vendor until fully paid for. The vendors agree to ship goods to you as herein set forth until further notice. 156 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. The undersigned agree to settle for all goods ordered by him from the vendors as herein set forth. In consideration for the control of the sale of your im- plement in the above territory, I agree to push the sale of them with energy and to become interested in the sale of no other of the same line of manufacture as made bv you. Name. P.O. Ey. Station. ANOTHER FOEM OF ORDBE FOE CHATTEL, WITH SPECIAL WAEEANTY BY VENDOE. Toronto, ,19 . To Sir, — Please sell us (here describe the chattel) and have the same ready about the next, to be delivered at Toronto for ' station, for which we agree to pay, -n'hen ready for delivery, the siim of $ in cash, or by note, payable at your office, Toronto, as follows: with interest at seven per cent, per annum. We further agree to furnish satisfactory security if re- quired. We are to have immediate possession and use of the articles, but the property therein is not to pass to us until full payment of the price, and of any obligation given there- for, or for any part thereof. If we make any default, or if the property is seized for debt or rent, the whole amount of the notes is at once to become payable, and to bear interest at ten per cent, per annum till paid, and you may resume possession, and sell the articles, towards paying the unpaid price or balance thereof. This order and your acceptance thereof constitute the whole contract between u-s, and there is DO other agreement between us respecting these articles but what is herein expressed. APPENDIX — FORMS. 157 SPECIAL WARRANTY. The above machinery is warranted to be made of good material and with proper usage to work well. If the above machine will not bear the above warranty after a trial of onfe day, written notice shall be given to . and the agent of whom purchased, stating wherein it fails to satisfy the warranty, and reasonable time shall be given to send a competent person to remedy the difficulty, the pur- chaser rendering necessary and friendly assistance. If the machinery cannot be made to iill the warranty, it is to be immediately returned by the purchaser to the place where received, free of charge, and another substituted therefor that shall fill the warranty, or the money and notes returned. When at the request of the purchaser a man is sent to operate the above machinery which is found to have been carelessly or ignorantly handled, to its injury in doing good work, putting same in working order again, the ex- pense incurred by him shall be paid by purchaser. Con- tinued possession shall be evidence of satisfaction. Witness : DELIVERY OEDEE FOR CHATTEL, WITH EIGHT OF PROPERTY RETAINED IN VENDOR. Lindsay, Ont. , 19 To (hereafter ca,lled the vendor). Yoii are hereby instructed by the undersigned (hereinafter called the purchaser), to ship to my address, with such reason- able business despatch as your convenience will permit, from at purchaser's risk and expense to me at in the Province of and in care of the following as per prices agreed upon: {here describe minutely the property.) 158 CO.VDITIONAL SALES ACT. The above machinery is warranted, with proper usage, to do good work, and to be of good materials throughout and in good order. It is also agreed that the purchaser will supply competent men to properh' operate said machinery. Each purchaser certifie,^ that he is th,e owner in fee, in his own right of the property described as follows : The property in the said goods shall not pass to the pur- chaser until the purchase money hereinafter mentioned, and the notes given therefor or by way of renewal (if any), ohall have been fully paid. Provided tliat in default of payment of said notes, or renewals thereof, all payments made shall! he forfeited, but the said purchaser to have possession and to use the said machinery until default is made in the payment of the price, or of some part thereof, or of any obligation given therefor. If any statements herein made are ascer- tained to be untrue, or if the said purchaser becomes insol- vent, absconds, is about to abscond, encumbers, is about to encumber, or is disposing of his, or has his property attached, or sells, or attempts to sell his property or machinery without leave from the said Vendor, or his assigns in writing, then in such case the whole debt and any note or notes given on account thereof shall iDecome due and payable, and the said Vendor or his assigns, may at his option, assume possession of above machinery, with or without legal process, and re- cover such costs and damages as he may have incurred in consequence of such default, or of any other cause above stated, and any balance remaining unpaid. All prior pay- ments to be considered as rent only. And the purchaser further agrees with the said Vendor and his assigns, that he shall have a charge upon the said lands for the amount of the said purchase money, and in- terest upon the said lands and any other land whereof such purchaser is now or shall hereafter own or be interested in until the said notes and all renewals thereof shall have been fully paid, and the said lands are hereby charged with the payment of the said purchase money, notes and all reneweals APPENDIX — FORMS. 159 thereof, and interest as hereinafter mentioned, and for the purpose of securing the same, the purchaser hereby grants to the vendor aforesaid, his heirs and assigns, the said land, and all such other lands aforesaid, and agrees with the Vendor, that on default (for one month) in payment he, the Vendor or his survivor or his heirs, administrators or as- signs shall be entitled to exclusive possession of the said lands, and may, (after one month's previous written notice to the purchaser, his heirs or assigns of his or their intention to exercise this power, which notice may be given by mailing at such notice addressed to the purchaser at the Post Office address hereunder given, or leaving the same at the usual or last place of abode in this Province of the pur- chaser), sell and convey, or before sale let or demise to any person or persons all or any of said lands hereby charged, for such consideration as he or they shall deem proper, and either subject or not to any prior encumbrances thereon, and apply the residue of the proceeds (after reimbursing himself or themselves thereout the expenses about such sale or about retaking or removing or endeavouring to retake said machin- ery, or about the collection of any of said notes) in or towards payment of the then unpaid notes or renewals or purchase moneys aforesaid, and any surplus shall belong to the under- sigaed or their assigns, and production of any of said notes overdue shall be conclusive evidence to any such purchaser or lessee of such default having been made and continued from the maturity thereof. All moneys which shall be owing to the purchaser for work done by (or by the agents or ser- vants of) the purchaser during any season hereafter, either wholly or partly, with or by the aid of such machinery or any thereof, shall (to the extent of the purchase moneys here- under, or notes therefor, then overdue or falling due within six months thereafter), belong to and are hereby assigned by tlie undersigned to the Vendor aforesaid, he to apply to any amounts actually received by him therefrom (less the expenses in collecting same), on account of such moneys or notes over- due or so falling due, and the balance repaid to the purchaser. 160 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. Non-registration hereof against said lands shall not, nor shall failure or neglect to calleot earnings hereby assigned, or to notify persons liable therefor, release or affect the liability of persons liable as surety or endorser for payment of any of said purchase moneys or notes, it being intended that the Vendor shall not be bound to resort to such lands or earnings further than they deem proper for their own security. Fail- ing to make payment at office, expense of collection to be paid by the purchaser. I hereby waive all legal and homestead exemptions as to our real and personal estate. If from any cause not under the control of the Vendor, said machinery is delayed beyond the time agreed for its delivery, no damages shall be claimed by the purchaser. In consideration whereof, the undersigned agree to receive the same; and to pay freight and charges from place of ship- ment, on arrival, and also on delivery to pay the sum of dollars to the said Vendor, his executors, admin- istrators or assigns, in lawful monej', on the following terms of payment: CASH, on or before delivery, $ Balance as follows : with eight per cent, interest per annum from date until due, and any arrears of interest to be added to the principal an- nually, and bear interest at rate aforesaid : And it is hereby agreed that if the said notes are not executed and satisfactory security furnished, as agreed, before the said machinery is used and within ten days after the delivery of the said machinery-, then in such case the whole debt be- comes due and payable. "Witness our hands and seals the day and year above written. (Seal). P.O. (Seal). P.O. (Seal). P.O. APPENDIX — FORMS. 161 FOlv'M OF AFFIDAVIT OF EXECUTION TO ACCOM- ■ PANY NEXT PRECEDING INSTEUMENT FOR PURPOSE OF REGISTRATION. Province of ] I- I (Name in full of witness:) County of ' I of the of in the County of in the Province of Ontario, make oath and say: 1. — I was personally present and did see the within in- strument duly signed, sealed and executed by the parties thereto. 2.- — That the said instrument was executed at 3. — That I know the said parties. •i- — That I am a subscribing witness to the said instru- ment and duplicate. Sworn before me at ^ ] in the County of this I \ day of , 19 J -i Commissioner, &c. ANOTHER FORM OF DELIVERY ORDER. To Messrs. Lindsay 19 Gentlemen, — Please supply me with one and ship the same to Station, Railway, about the day of next, for which I agree to pay the sum of dollars on delivery, in payment as follows: a satisfactory note for | due do I due do I . due payments, with seven per cent, interest. B.C.A. — 11 163 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. I agree to settle for this machine in cash or notes accord- ing to above terms as soon as it is started and fills the war- ranty. I am to have possession and use of this machine, but the title therein is not to pass to me until payment of the price or of any obligations given therefor; and if any default in the payment is made possession is to revert to you, and should I sell or dispose of my property you may declare all payments due and payable even before maturity of same, and may also retake possession of the machine. This order is not to be binding on you until received and ratified by you and is subject to warranty and agreement here- under written. Customer's P. 0. (Signed), Agent, The above machine is purchased and sold subject to the following WARRANTY AND AGREEJIENT. The said machine is made of good material, and with proper man- agement it is capable of doing good work. The purchaser shall have one day to give it a fair trial, and if it should not work well, he is to give written notice, stating whereiin it fails, to the Agent through whom it was ordered, and also to the Vendors, and allow reason- able time to get to it and remedy the defects, if any, the purchaser rendering necessary and friendly assistance, furnishing a suitable team, driver, etc., when, if it cannot be made to do good work, he shall return it to the ijlace where received free of charge, in as good condition as when received except the natural wear, and a new machine will be given in its place, or the notes and money will be refunded. Should any part of the machine break during the first season through defective material or workmanship and by fair usage, it shall be replaced free of charge when the broken parts are returned to the Vendors or the Agent through whom the machine was pur- chased. Continued possession of the machine or failure to give notice as above shall be conclusive evidence that the machine fulfils the Warranty. (Signature of Vendors.) No Agent has authority to change the above Warranty. APPENDIX — FORMS. 163 ANOTHER FORM OF DELIVERY ORDER. Toronto, 19 To Toronto, Canada. Gentlemen, — You will please ship to my address, about ,19 , of j'our {here describe Lhe implements.) Which I agree to receive and give a fair and impartial trial, without being iniiuenced by any other manufacturers' agents, and to purchase if it proves equal to your Warranty, and as guaranteed, or to return within ten days after receipt of im- plement as above to the Station, and notify you that it is there subject to your order. This is given in good faith, as I wish to purchase the best. The Price, complete, as above, is dollars, for which I agree to give settlement, payable as follows : after trial as above, and until fully settled for, the title and property to remain in the Vendors. This order is subject to the memorandum hereunder written. WARRANTY AND SPECIAL NOTICE. The foregoing implements will .not be received if returned to us without our permission, and no implements returned under this warranty will be credited on account, but will be made perfect and returned, or new ones sent in their place, as the Vendors may elect. The Vendors warrant each implement to do first-class work when properly adjusted. After ten days allowed after delivery for time to give it a trial in the field, if it fails to give satisfaction, notice must be given to the dealer selling it, and reasonable time given him to make it work as represented, failing in which the implement can be returned. If used to do more than one day's work on trial terms as above, the implement will be considered sold. 164 CONDITIONAL SALES -ACT. The Vendors agi-ee to repair implements proving defective, but no allowance will be made on broken parts not returned to Vendors or their agents. Implements with defective iron or steel parts to be taken down, marked with an explanation of the defect, and signed by the sender, that the Vendors may know who it is from, the Vendors will put in order, free, and return. The Vendors will not undertake to pay for repairing implements away from shop. All Warranty cancelled when implement passes into other hands or loaned to neighbors. (Signature of Vendors.) AISTOTHBE POEM OP DELIVBEY OEDEE. Lindsay, Ont. , 19 To Gentlemen, — Please supply me with one and ship the same to Station, Eailway, about the day of next, for which I agree io pay the sum of Dollars on delivery, in payment as follows: Satisfactory note for $ due 19 , with 8% interest do do $ due 19 , with 8% interest do do $ due 19 , with 8 % interest I agree to settle for this machine in cash or notes accord- ing to above terms as soon as it is started and fills the Warranty. 1 am to ha^o possession and use of machine, but the title therein is not to pass to me until payment of price or of any obligations given therefor; and if any default in payment is made, possession is to revert to you, and should 1 sell or dis- pose of my property you may declare all payments due and payable even before maturity of same, and suit may be en- tered, tried and finally disposed of in the court where the liead office of the Vendors is located, and may retake posses- sion of the machine, without process of law, and sell machine to pay the unpaid balance of the price whether due or not- APPENDIX — FORMS. 165 This Order is not to be binding on the Vendors until re- ceived and ratified by them, and is subject to Warranty and Agreement hereunder written. I declare the above to be a true copy of the bargain for the sale of this machine. Agent. (Signed), General Agent. The above-mentioned machine is purchased and sold subject to the following WARRANTY AND AGREEMENT. The machine is made of good material, and with proper manage- ment it is capable of doing good work. The purchaser shall have one day to give it a fair trial, and if it should not work well, he is to give written notice, stating wherein it fails, to the agent through whom it was ordered, and also to the Vendors, Lindsay, Ont., and allow rea- sonable time to get to it and remedy the defects, if any. the purchaser rendering necessary and friendly assistance, furnishing a suitable team, driver, etc., when, if it cannot be made to do good work, he shall return it to the place where received, free of charge, in as good condition as when received except the natural wear, and , a new machine will be given in its place, or the notes and money will be refunded. Should any part of the machine,break during the first sea- son through defective material or workmanship, and by fair usage, it shall be replaced free of charge when the broken parts are returned to us or the agent through whom the machine was purchased. Con- tinued possession of the machine, or failure to give notice as above, shall be conclusive evidence that the machine fulfils the Warranty. No agent has authority to change the above Warranty. STATEMENT TO OBTAIN CREDIT. I own and have a deed of, duly registered in my name acres of land, it being Lot No. of the Concession of the Township of in the County Province the current cash value of which is not less than $ and the same is free and clear of all incumbrance except 1 also own personal property not exempt from execution of the value of at least $ in excess of the amount of all my debts and liabilities. (This statement is made to Vendors to procure credit from them in the purchase of the goods mentioned in the above order and the same are sold by them on the faith thereof.) Signature of purchaser Dated at IGG CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. ANOTHEK FOEM OF DELIVEEY OEDBE. 19 . To The Company, Toronto, Ont. You are hereby authorized to ship to me, to Station, on or about day of next, or before required for use, the following implements and mach- inery: {here describe the property.) For which I agree to pay you Dollars in cash ; or my notes, payable as follows : Note for $ due the first day of , 19 , with int. at 7% Note for $ due the first day of , 19 , with int. at 7% Note for $ due the first day of , 19 , with int. at 7% Payable at This machine to" be warranted as per Manufacturers' printed Warranty, hereunder written, and I agree to settle for it upon above terms, as soon as it is started and fills the Warranty. I further agree to furnish securitj^, satisfactory to you, at any time, if required. If I fail to furnish such security when demanded, or if I make any default in payment, or should I dispose of my landed property, you may then de- clare the whole price due and payable, and suit therefor may be immediately entered, tried, and finally disposed of in the Court in whose division the head office of The Company is, and you may retake possession of the machinery without process of law and sell it to pay the unpaid balance of the price whether due or not. Subject to the aforesaid provisions I am to have possession and use of the machinery at my own risk, but the title thereto is not to pass to me until full payment of the price, or any obligation given therefor. APPENDIX — FORMS. 167 These conditions and agreements are to continue in force until the full payment of the price is made. ^OTE. — This Order is not to be binding on The Company until received and ratified by them. (Signed), Agent, Witness, WARRANTY. WE, THE UNDEKSiGNED, agree that the for which Mr. has giren his order this day, shall be well made and of good material, and will work well on a fair trial ; also, that should any part break during the first season, through defective material or workmanship and by fair usage, it shall be re- placed free of charge, if the broken parts are returned to us or our Agent from whom the machine was purchased, before the follow- ing date of purchase. If after a fair trial of one day, the said does not work according to Warranty, it will be the duty of the pur- chaser to immediately give written notice to us at Toronto, and also to the Agent through whom it was purchased, stating wherein it fails, and allow reasonable time to get to it and remedy the defects, if any ; the purchaser rendering necessary and friendly assistance, furnishing a suitable team, driver, etc., when, if the machine cannot be made to do good work, he shall return it to the place where received free of charge, in as good condition as when received, except the natural wear, and a new machine will be given in its place, or the notes or money will be refunded. Continued possession of the machine, or faiilure to give notice as above, shall be conclusive evidence that the machine fulfils the War- ranty. This Warranty is not valid or binding upon The Company, unless delivered to the purchaser without alteration, inter- lining, or erasure. Dated 189 Agent Signature of Vendors 168 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. ANOTHER FORM. OF DELIVERY ORDER. Toronto, 19 . To Please ship to my address with such reasonable business despatch as your convenience will permit, from place of manufacture, or the following as per prices agreed upon: Terms : Amount, $ And I hereby agree that if the said machinery or goods is not settled for, by cash or notes, according to the above terms of sale, within 20 days after date of shipment, then the whole amount shall become due, and I, for value received, promise to pay the same on demand. And I further agree not to countermand this order, and until payment in full of the purchase money the said mach- iiiCry and goods shall be at my risk, and I will insure in your favor for amount sufficient at all times to cover your interest therein, and on demand will assign and deliver to you the policy of insurance, and should I fail to do so within ten rdays after receipt of goods, you are at liberty and are hereby instructed, to insure them as per this agreement, and the charges and costs for so insuring shall become part of this indebtedness and be added to the first cash pa5anent, and the title in the said machinery and goods shall not pass from you until all the dues, terms and conditions of this order shall have been fully complied with by me. and I will not sell or APPENDIX — FORMS. 169 remove any of the said machinery or goods from my premises without your consent in writing so to do, and in case of de- fault of any of the payments or provisions of this order you are at liberty without process of law to enter upon my premises and take down and remove the said machinery and goods, and I hereby agree to deliver the said machinery and goods to you in like condition as received, subject to ordinary wear and tear, and I hereby waive all claims fo'r damages or loss, and will pay the expenses of such removal. And I hereby declaxe that the foregoing embodies all the agreements made between us in any form, and that any note or notes or other security given by me to you for this indebtedness shall be collateral thereto. Yours truly, Ship via FORM OF EECEIPT TO BE CtIVEjST BY BAILEE OR CONDITIONAL VENDEE OF RECEIPT NOTE, HIRE RECEIPT, OR ORDER, UNDER SECTION 8 OF THE ACT (See ante p. 68), AND WHICH SHOULD ACCOMPANY ALL INSTRUMENTS UN- DER THE ACT. Lindsay, Ont. 19 .' I acknowledge to have received on the above date a true and correct copy of the receipt note, the hire receipt, order, or sale note (as the case may be), by which a lien on that certain property (describe property), conditionally sold to me, on the day of , 19 . has been retained by (here insert name of Vendors). Signature of Bailee or Vendee. 170 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. FORM OF APPLICATION BY PROPOSED PUR- CPTASER FOR INFORMATION RESPECTING AMOUNT OR BALANCE DUE OR UNPAID ON MANUFACTURED ARTICLES UNDER SECTION 2, ante p. 41. To of SlE^ I (name in full) am a proposed purchaser of (or) in- terested in the following manufactured chattel, namely : (here describe the same) now in the possession of (give the name and description in full of the person in whose posses- sion the chattel is). I request full information respecting the amount due, or the balance due or unpaid to you, if anything, on said manu- factured chattel, and the terms of payment of such or balance. My name is (here give name in full) and my post office address to which a reply may be sent is (here give name of post office). Dated at this day of A.D. 19 . (Signature of Applicant). FORM OF LETTER SUPPLYING THE INFORMA- TION DEMANDED BY FOREGOING APPLICA- TION UNDER SECTION 2, ante p. 41. To of (the name and post office address given by the person enquiring) . Sir, The amount due (or) The balance due (or) The amount unpaid (or) The balance unpaid on that certain manufactured chattel referred to by you in .your application for information bearing date the day of APPENDIX FORMS. l^l 19 , and received by the undersigned on the day of 19 , is the sum of $ . The terms of payment of such amount (or) balance are as follows (hei-e stale fully the sum to he paid, the time or time of payment, with or without interest if on, or by way of promis- sory note, or by way of rent or otherwise)- This statement is mailed to you at the a))ove address and registered. Dated this day of at in the (Signature of manufacturer, or vendor, or bailor). FOEM OF NOTICE OF SALE UNDEE SECTION 5. ante p. 58. To , of Sir, Notice is hereby given you that, at the expiration of five days, from the day of service of this notice upon you, to wit : upon day of 19 1 shall pro- ceed to sell the following goods or chattels, namely, (describe the property) at in the of in the county of . The said goods or chattels were taken possession of by me, on account of the breach of condi- tion in the conditional sale or promise of sale thereof by me to yoxi. If you desire to redeem the said goods or chattels you are at liberty to do so, at any time within twenty days after the day of (the day of taking possession) on payment of the sum of $ being the amount in arrear in such conditional sale together with interest and actual costs and expenses of taking posses- sion which have been incurred. Dated this day of 18 17:;3 i ok::-" t: sm a u*' - S g >.f £ « s ^3 s S °'> ".y g.i; > = > U W OJtI G*« ?^ u 4> .,«.-' ^ H^ >^'H .r-n SflS 5 £; o £ -^^ « .2^=^ "43 n «•- II ^- ri £; " rt^ 2-2-^ 3 !".S o-g "-2 "-HS 5 = e^„ = a"J ocja„.a S" O u „ o ™ e'-S „ 3hh WJ3 > S " 0, ^ S3 *-S-BE^-f t >•£ .■Hr M --a >-o-| = «.«-« S «^ rt "u o 5-x: > rtpjq >,-a r c J3 s Si S ■S-D>g= o O S° t= !3 2 = «-S irgs c i: f ' Q c = '. 'wi 'No Salesman or Agent is authorized to make any promise, verbal or otherwise, outside of this Agreement, or in any way to alter the same. Eeceived from one piano. Style , No. , and for which I agree to pay Hundred and Dollars ($ ), with interest at seven per cent, per annum on unpaid balances both before and after maturity, at the ofBce of the said Company, Toronto, or as follows It is agreed that until the whole of the purchase money be paid the Instrument shall remain the property of the payees (but shall be at my risk) . And in default for one month of a^y of above pay- ments or any extended payment, or in case the said Instrument shall be removed from the premises hereafter mentioned (unless consent is given in writing by the Company), the whole balance of the said purchase money shall, at the option of the Company, become due, and the Company, or their agents, may, notwithstanding any action for or judgment recovered in respect of the purchase money of the said Instrument, or any part thereof, using such force as may be required, and without being liable to any action for so doing, enter upon the premises where saiid Instrument may be, and resume posses- sion thereof without any previous demand, and resell the same, al- though a part of the purchase money may have been paid, or securities given and discounted, this agreement being conditional on punctual payment. If possession is resumed I shall remain liable for full amount of the purchase money, but shall be entitled to receive credit thereon for the proceeds of such Instrument after deducting costs of removing and reselling the same, and any balance that may then remain shall be paid to me. Any notes, bills of exchange, or other securities which may be given by me, are only collateral, and ai-e not in any way to relieve me from payment according to the terms hereof. The said Instrument shall, until paid for, be used only at my resi- dence, No. Street, , and shall not be re- moved therefrom without the written consent of the Company. This contract (a copy of which Ihave received) contains the whole agreement between myself and Toronto Signature Witness Salesman P. O. Address APPENDIX FORMS. 183 A GUARANTEE FOR THE PERFORMANCE BY THE PUR- CHASER OF FOREGOING AGREEJIENT. I hereby guarantee to that the within named will pay all the moneys which shall become due by to them under the within agreement, and that will perform all other terms and conditions thereof, and all obliga- tions that may arise out of the same. Signed FORM OF CONDITIONAL HIRE EECBIPT. This contract is subject to the approval of Company. No Salesman or Agent is authorized to make any promise, verbal or otherwise, outside of this Agreement. Received from on hire for months at Dollars per month payable in advance, the said Piano Forte being valued at $ , which sum I agree to pay in the event of said instrument being injured, destroyed, or not being returned to on demand, free of expense, in good order, reasonable wear excepted, and should the above period be extended this agreement shall continue binding. It is agreed that I may purchase the said Piano Forte for the sum of Dollars payable as follows: with interest at seven per cent, per annum on unpaid prin- cipal, but, until the whole of the purchase money, and in- terest be paid, the said Piano Forte shall remain the property of , on hire by me, and shall 184 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. not be moved froin the premises where now delivered without the written consent of . And, in default of the punctual payment of any instalment of the said pur- chase money, when it falls due, according to the times aboye stated respective!}-, or at any time or times, to which the pay- ment thereof, or any part thereof, may hereafter be extended, or of the said monthly rental in advance; or in case the said instrument shall be removed, or any attempt made, or threat- ened to move it from the said premises without such written consent, , or their agents, may, using such force as may be required, without rendering themselves liable to anj^ action or actions for so doing, enter upon the piremises, where the said Piano Forte may be, and resume possession thereof, without any previous demand, although a part of the purchase money may have been paid, or a Note or jSTotes, Bill or Bills of Exchange, given on account thereof, and although the same may be then outstanding under dis- count, this agreement for sale being conditional, and punc- tual payment being essential to it. If possession is resumed, as aforesaid, all instalments of rent to date of taking posses- sion shall be forthwith paid by me, together with any dam- ages the instrument may have sustained beyond any ordinary wear, and all expenses incurred in connection with this con- tract, and the carrying out of the same on the part of the said and all costs and expenses connected with taking possession of the said instrument, or otherwise occasioned by my default. But, any sum received on account of the purchase money beyond the amount due for rent, and any costs and expenses incurred as aforesaid, is to be repaid to me, and any Xotes or Bills of Exchange received on account of the purchase money, are in such event to be re- turned to me at maturity. On payment in full of purchase money, and interest, no rent or hire is to be charged to me. Any Notes or Bills of Exchange, or other securities given by me are only collateral, and are not in any way to relieve me from payment, according to the terms thereof. And it is further agreed that this receipt and agreement embodies the whole of the agreement between myself APPENDIX — FORMS. 1 86 and with respect to said Piano Forte and I hereby waive all verbal agree- ments not embodied herein, and agree that I am not entitled to receive credit at any time for any moneys which may be received by by the discount of any of the Xotes or Bills of Exchange which may have been taken by them on account of said purchase money. I hereby acknowledge to have received a copy of this agreement. Toronto, (Sign here) GUAEAXTEE TO ACCOMPAXY NEXT ABOVE AGEEEMENT. I, hereby guarantee to that the within named will pay all mt)neys which shall become due by to them under the within Conditional Hire Eeceipt, and that will perform and fulfil all the other terms and conditions thereof, and all obligations that may arise out of the same. Dated FOEM OF OEDEE. To Toronto, Ont. Toronto, 190 . Gentlemen,. — Please supply me with one and ship to station about or before required for use, for which I agree to pay tlie sum of Dollars, as follows : — A Satisfactory Arote for $ due 1st day of 190 , with int. at 7%. 1!^6 CONDITIONAL SALES ACT. A Satisfactory Note for $ due 1st day of 190 , with int. at 7%. A Satisfactory Note for $ due 1st day of 190 , with int. at 7%. Payable at This machine to be warraiited as- per manufacturers' printed War- ranty endorsed hereon, and I agree to settle for it on above terms, and I acknowledge having received a true copy of this Order, Agree- ment and Warranty as endorsed on back hereof. I agree not to rescind this Order or Agreement or attempt to do so. I also promise and agree to furnish further security satisfactory to you, at any time, if required. If I fail to furnish such security when demanded, before shipment, you may at your option cancel this order. If I fail to furnish such security after shipment, or if I make any default in payment, or should I dispose or attempt to dispose of my land, or any part thereof, or of my personal property for any one of the above-named reasons alone, you may declare the whole price due and payable, even before other maturity by promissory note or other- wise, of the same, and suit therefor may be immediately entered, tried and finally disposed of in any Court having jurisdiction where your Toronto office is located, and you may re-take possession of the machine, implement, or property so sold to me without process of law, and at any time thereafter, without notice to me. may sell the same at public auction or private sale, the proceeds thereof, less proper charges of re-taking possession and sale, to be applied an account of the amount of the purchase price and interest then unpaid ; such sale or right to sell shall in no way affect or limit my liability for the full purchase price or your right to sue for and recover from me said full purchase price and interest, except that in the event of such sale I shall receive credit on account, as before provided, and shall there- after be liable to pay the balance only. Upon such sale, if any, my right to possession and delivery before and after full payment, and all my other rights and claims thereto, shall forever cease. Subject to these provisions, I am to have possession and use of the machine, or implement, or property at my own risk of damage or destruction from any cause whatsoever ; but the property therein and the title thereto is not in any event to pass to me, on contrary, shall remain in you until full payment of the purchase price and interest, or any obliga- tions or renewals thereof given therefor. Witness APPENDIX — FORMS. 187 This machine Is purchased and sold subject tQ the terms of agree- ment signed by purchaser and to the following WARRANTY AND AGREEMENT. This machine is made of good material, and with proper manage- ment it is capable of doing good work. The purchaser shall have one day to give it a fair trial, and if it should not work well, he is to give written notice, stating wherein it fails, to the Agent through whom it was ordered, and also to Toronto, Ont., and allow reasonable time to get it and remedy the defects, if any, the pur- chaser rendering necessary and friendly assistance, furnishing a suit- able team, driver, &c., when, if it cannot be made to do good work, he shall return it to the place where received, free of charge, in as good condition as when received except the natural wear, and a new machine will be given in its place, or the notes and money will be refunded. Should any part of the machine break during the first sea- son through defective material or workmanship, and by fair usage, it shall be replaced free of charge when the broken parts are returned to us or the agent through whom the machine was purchased. Con- tinued possession of the machine or failure to give notice as above shall be conclusive evidence that the machine fulfils the Warranty. No Agent has authority to change the above Wai-ranty. INDEX ACCErXAXCB; necessary to complete execution of deeds, etc., 19. ACTUAL KXO^VLEDGE : in mortgagee or pureliaser, etc.. etc., 53. ADDRESS : of enquirer to be given, KJO. of manufacturer or vendor necessary, etc., 67. time when it must be placed on chattel conditionally sold, 65. of applicant for information must be given, 100. if no address given, then to be sent to " proper address." 101. what is man's " proper address," 101. if reply indistinctly addressed and miscari-y, on whom the loss- falls, 101-103. general address insufficient, 103. ADMINISTRATOR : of vendee or bailee may redeem, 117. AGENT : of vendor, sale by, 46, 47. of vendee, may sign, 71. how appointed, 71. by subsequent ratification, 71. when, by subsequent ratification, principal's existence necessary, 71. who may be, 71. bailee or vendee cannot be agent for bailor or vendor, 71. implied authority to, how it may arise, 71. AGREEMENT : usually provides for payment of rent to be applied on purchase money, 7. when rentals, the purchase money, transaction one of sale with reservation, 7. construction put thereon by Canadian Courts, 7. effect of Statute thereon, 7, 8. ALTERXATIVE: statutory alternatives provided for, 55. AMOUNT : of claim of vendor, etc., how to be ascertained, 95, 96. 98. 190 INDEX. APPEAL : from conviction foi- refusing information, 95, 99, 100. to what Court, 100. none from dismissal, 100. APPLICANT : who may be an applicant for information, 96. must give his name and post office address, 100. for information omitting to give his address, 102, 103. must bear the loss of his giving indistinct address, 101. address of. must be distinctly written. 101. APPLICATION : for information, how made, 96. to whom to be made, 95, 101. by whom to be made, 96. 101. if by letter, what, 98. may be verbally, 95. objections to verbal method, 95, 98. form of, when made in writing, 96. 98. not made until received, 102, 97. should not be to employee or agent of vendor, etc., 99. if to employee or agent, must be brought to knowledge of vendor, 99. what it should be for, 96, 99. only information asked for need be furnished, 99. ASCERTAINED : chattel must be, 19. ASSIGNEE : for benefit of creditors, rights of, 58. ATTESTATION : not necessary, 68. meaning of word, 68. BAIL : kind of, 24. what within Statute, 25. determined by sale, 37. BAILEE : who is, 21. may maintain action against stranger, 23, 24. meaning of term, 21. when interests of, are severable, instrument within the Act, 22. when entitled to action for interference with chattel, 22, 23, 24. what care required to be exercteed by, 28 et sen. cannot be .agent under the Act for the bailor, 71. INDEX. 1Q1 BAILEE — Continued. must not put article to use other than that which was intended, 30. may redeem chattel, 116. his successor in interest may redeem, 116. liability for negligence in case of joint bailees, 33. liability, etc., in case of sub-agent, 33. signature of, to instrument required, 71. may mortgage or sell his interest, 37. may dispute bailor's title, 37. his act may amount to felony, 37. bailment determined by sale, 37. BAILMENT : effect of word iu statute, 16. meaning of, 23. of undivided interest in chattel not within the Act. 17. essence of contract of bailment is possession passing. 18. 19. presence or absence of certain conditions, the test of applica- tion of Act, 22. if some conditions within, some without the Act, Statute applies if interests severable, 23. when interests are severable, 23. what is bailment, 23. 24. how divided and distinguished, 24. must be in writing as against subsequent purchaser or mort gagee, 1, 68. what necessary to procure legal obligation of, 26. BAILOR : may lose his rights in chattel by bailee attaching to freehold. 121. when interests of, are several under the Act, 23. when entitled to an action for interference with chattel, 23, 24. obligation devolving on, in relation to chattel, 5o, ."4, 34. different obligations, when bailor gratuitous, 34. may mortgage or sell his interest in chattel, 37. his interest liable under execution, 37, 3S. if he sells or mortgages, bailee may refuse to deliver to bailor, 37, 38. . See Vbndob, JIanufactueeb, Owker. must on application, furnish certain information. 9-5. et seq. successor in interest may take possession, 104, et seq. mortgagee of, a successor in interest. 108. ipay take possession for breach of condition, 108. rights of, in chattel, after taking possession, 108. See Possession, must leave a copy of instrument with bailee or vendee, 91. BEER : not within Statute, 12. 192 INDEX. BREACH : rights of vendor on, 108. by vendor, rights of vendee, 108, et seq. waiver of, 112, et seq. CAPACITY: .,j ; to contract, rules of common law applicable to cases under the Act, 27. 28. CAKE: of chattels by vendee, 28, 29. circumstances to be considered, 29. CHATTELS : real, not within Statute, 15. affixed to realty, 121. personal, definition of, 15. must be ascertained, 19. meaning of, within the Act, 11. how divided, 15. personal, meaning of, 15. Statute applies only to movable chattels, 16. not to chattels to be acquired, 16, 17. delivery and change of possession essential, 17. Statute applies to a specific chattel. 19. in bond or custom house incapable of bailment, not within the Act, 18. subject to or charged with claims of third parties, not within the Act, 18, 19. when possession does not pass then Statute does not apply, 19. cannot be attached to realty so as to make chattel part of realty against the interest of the vendor, 121. when chattels are fixtures, 121, et seq. >Src Fixtures. care of, by vendee. 31. circumstances to be considered, 32. et sea. Statute only applies to chattels where ownership therein does not pas-; 39. of value of .$30, when taken possession, cannot be sold without notice given, etc., 117. CHEATING : see collusion, 48. CHEQUE: not payment if dishonoured, 48. CLERK : his certificate as to filing may be disputed in evidence, 75. his duties on presentation of instrument under the Act, 76. filing of instrument, when clerk absent, 82. INDEX. 193 COLLUSION : between vendee and purchaser to defraud vendor, makes com- pliance with Act unnecessary, 48. COMPUTATION : of time, 74, 95. CONDITION : up6n breach of, possession may be taken, 108. presence or absence of what conditions sives the Statute an application, 22. if instrument contains conditions within and without Statute, then, if severable, Statute has partial application, 22. definition of, 23. CONDITIONAL SALES ACT: distinguished from Act respecting Bills of Sale, 1. to be construed strictly, 2. COAL : not a manufactured article, 13. CONDITIONAL PURCHASER : meaning of term, 87. CONDITIONAL SALE: distinguished from mortgage, 2. what within Statute, 4, 6. to be in writing, 6. 68. subject to law of contract, 27. camiot be made by stranger. 39. void, in what cases, .52. proper application of term, 104. what necessary to procure legal obligation of, 26, 104. instances of, 4. 104. 105. 107. of piano, to be used in house of ill-fame, illegal, 27. strictly speaking, not hit at by the Act, 4. only those contemplated wherein possession changes and not ownership, 4. both ownership and possession changes in some cases, 4. when right of re-purchase exists sale is conditional, 4. Act does not apply to sales with right of repurchase reserved, 4. nor to " sales to ariive," only to transactions covered by " re- ceipt notes," " hire receipts." " orders for cliattels," 2, 4. latter transactions common. 4, 5. reasons why such transactions numerous, 6, 7. of moiety, or part interest, in a chattel, not withiij the Act, 17. CONSIDERATION : money considei-ation contemplated by Statute, 47, 64. if any other, not within the Act, 47. what is a valuable consideration. 64, 65. E.C.A. — 13 194 INDEX. CONSIDERATION— ''oJittJimed. fact of purchase or consideration money not being payable to vendor does not deprive Statute of application, 47, 48. taking note for consideration money does not prevent application of Statute, 48. but otherwise, if taken in satisfaction of purchase money, 48. no objection to discounting notes representing consideration, 48, 49. so doing not waiver of ownership in property, 49. may be payable by way of rentals, 49. rentals usually the consideration. 7. construction thereof by Canadian Courts, 7. money a valuable consideration, 64. anything bearing a known value is such, 64. any benefit to the promisor, 64. marriage, 64. loss, trouble, detriment, etc.. 64. suspension, or forbearance of legal proceedings, 64. CONSIGNMENT OF GOODS: when within Statute, 5. CONTRACT : must be signed by vendee, 55, 68. must be in writing, 6, 68. CONVERSION : what amounts to, 30. evidence of, 43. contract governs liability for loss, 33. COPT OF INSTRUMENT: to be filed. 76. 87. what meant by filing, SO, 90. copy need not be lan exact copy, 91. to be left with bailee or vendee. 91. failure to leave does not invalidate, 95. CORAL : when a manufactured article, 13. COSTS OF CONVICTION: for refusing information, 99. COTTON : when a manufactured article, 13. CREDITORS : not protected by Statute, 54, 56. have no better title than their debtor, 56, 57, 58. assignee for benefit of — what he acquires, ^>8. CUSTOMS : goods in charge of, 17, 18, 19, 20. INDEX. X95 DAMAGES : for breach of warranty, 35. DATE: of instrument not necessarily evidence as to when instrument executed, 75, 20, 21. parol evidence, admissible to shew date of instrument, not the date of execution. 75 DAYS: " ten days," when they begin to run, 74. 75. aiec IXFOBMATIOX. '■ twenty days," how computed, 95, 116. " seven days at least," how computed, 118. " ten days," how computed, 73. " five days," how computed, 97, 102. DELIVERY ; signing and delivery necessary in all instruments under the Act, 19. of chattel essential under the Act, 39. DESCRIPTION : of person not a signature, 70. DESTRUCTION : of chattel, who liable, 31, 32. DILIGENCE: degree of, required, 29. circumstances to be considered, 29. DISTINCTION: between Act, and Act relating to Bills of Sale and Chattel Mortgages, 2. DISTRESS : landlord may distrain, 61. extent of powers of distress, 61, 62. ENTRY : forcible entry may be made to remove chattel, 56. must not, however, create a breach of peace, 56 on another's Land, legal to get chattel, 50. not legal if chattel on land through fault of owner, .'(!. ESTOPPEL : as to claim of ownerehip of chattel, 43. giving possession does not create, 44. persons affected liy, 45, 40, 47. application of principles of, 46. EVIDENCE : who must prove sale, 4, •". as 'to correctness of clerk's certifioate as to filing, 76, 77, 78, 79, 84. 196 INDEX. EVIDENCE— Co»«(;i (fed. of time of deliveiT, 20. See Post Office, Information, Addbess, Estoppel, Application. EXECUTION: ' vendee's interest liable to. 31. but vendor may recover property, 58. sale of chattel under, when good against vendor. 60. 70. of instrument, from whence time begins to run, 20. not necessarily upon the date. 20, 21, 75. EXECUTOR : of bailee or vendee may redeem chattel, 117. FACTOR'S ACT: * possession under, not within Statute, 11. FENCES : may be within Act, 127. FIREWOOD : not a manufactured ai-ticle, 14. FILING : computation of time for, 74, 76. what is, 76, 77. 81, 82, 83, 84, 88, 89. where to be done, 76, 84. after office hours, effect of, 82. copy only to be filed. 72, 84. fee for, 88, 90. clerk's certificate, only prima facie correct, 75. FIXTURES : what are, 122. rights in respect of, 121. may be retained by owner of realty, 121. if severed, owner may re-take, 131, 132. FORFEITURE: by vendee, on broach, 108. FORMS : rent agreement, with privilege of purchase, 140. of conditional sale of machinery with statement by vendee of ownership of land, 141. of lien or rent receipt with right of purchase, 144. of release of right of distress by landlord upon chattels pur- chased by way of rent receipt or otherwise, 146. of hire receipt, with right of purchase, 146, 183. rent agreement, without conditions of purchase, where lessors assume, for a cash consideration, all risks from fire, 148. rent agreement, without conditions of purchase, loss by fire to be borne by the lessee, 148. rent agreement with conditions of purchase, 149. INDEX. IQiy FORMS — Continiied. agreement to sell upon condition. 150. another form, 151. form of promissory note given for property, the title and right wherein is retained by the payee, 153. another form, 153, 180. 181. another form, where vendor is to make remittance in sales made by him, 154. of order for delivery and sale of specific chattels from one who agrees to sell the same, and no other within certain terri- tory, 155. 178, 183. another form, with special warranty by vendor, 156. delivery order for chattel, with right of property retained in vendor, 157. of affidavit of execution to accompany instrument for purpose of registration when land afiEeeted, 161. another form of delivery order, 161, 163, 164, 166, 168, 172. of receipt to be given by bailee, or conditional vendee of receipt nate, hire receipt, or order, under section 8, and which should accompany all instruments under the Act, 169. of application by proposed purchaser for information respecting amount or balance due or unpaid on manufactured article under section two, 170. of letter supplying the information demanded by foregoing appli- cation, under section two. 170. of notice of sale, under section two. 171. to be used in Province of Quebec, 174. to be used in Maritime Provinces, 176. FRAUD : fraction of a day sometimes considered. 10, 44. an inquiry to, a loss of, chattel through fraud in vendee in- excusable, 17. vitiates all agreements. 30. " GIVEN :" meaning of, 19. GOOD FAITH: meaning of, 58, 51. requij-ed in purchaser and mortgagee, 58. actual knowledge not inconsistent with. 58. may exist, though notice possessed. 58. what is a purchaser in good faith, 59. HALF-INTEREST : sale of, 17. HAT: not manufactured article, 14. HIRE RECEIPTS: for manufactured goods, statutory requirements as to. 1. 198 INDEX. HIRE OF GOODS: when not within Statute, 4, 5. HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE: not within first section of Statute, 11. what included in, 72, 73, et seg. what is "fixed furniture," 73. ICE: when a manufactured article, 14. IMMOVABLES : when within Statute, 16. INFORMATION : to whom to be made, 99. if made by letter, 101. may be verbally made, 95. objections to veibal method of application. 95, 96. form of application for, when made by letter, 96. who is entitled to information, 96. what information must be furnished, 99. onus On person demanding it to shew he is within the descrip- tion of persons entitled to it under the Act, 97. must be furnished within five days, 95, 97, 102. five days and more may elapse, and yet Statute be complied with, 97. when five days begin to run, 97, 102. how information furnished. 100, 101. when it is presumed to be received. 98. statutory method should be followed, 97, 101. form of letter giving information, 98. refusal or neglect to give information, must be that of the ven- dor, etc., 99. by whom to be applied for, 96. his name and address must be given. 100. reply with, may be sent by registered letter, 101. how and where to be addressed, 100, 102. when no address given, how and where to be sent, 102. 103. if reply with information is deposited in post oflice, not neces- sary to prove that it was received, 101. loss or miscarriage of. upon whom it falls, 101. deliver.y to a mail-carrier of reply not sufficient. 101. post-mark prima fa^ic evidence that reply sent, 101. genuineness of post-mark, how proved. 101. if reply indistinctly addressed and miscarry, loss falls on sender, 101. deposit in post office of reply must be proved, 101. INITIALS : See Signing, Signature, 69. INDEX. 199 INJURY : to chattel when in possession of vendee, who responsible for and to what degree, 30. resulting from fraud inexcusable, 30. INQUIRY FROJI BAILOR: how made, 99. 95, 100, 101. how answered, 97. 100, 101. INSOLVENT VENDOR: rights of liquidator. 54. INSTALMENTS : forfeiture of, 110. INSTRUJIENTS : within the Act, when interest severable, not so when not severable, 23. must be in writing, 1. 68. no particular form necessary. 6S. what it must embody, 68. INTENTION : determines whether property passe«. 2. how gathered, 3. INTERESTED PERSON: is entitled to Inforaiation as. 9ri, 96. JUDGMENT : for price may be opened up on re-sale of chattel by vendor, .51, 112. LANDLORD : of vendee may purchase, 61. not after illegal distress, 62. right of distress, -his powers. 62. may distrain on goods sold under the Act. 62. LICENSE: to take possession irrevocable, 115. justifies entry, 115. not, however, if entry will cause breach of peace, 115. LIEN : must be reserved when contract made. 3, 9. is implied, 8. when excluded by contract, 8. 9. when held to be mortgage, 10. meaning of term, 8, 9. equitable, what is, 10. LIQUIDATOR : of insolvent vendor, rights of, 54. LOGS : when manufactured articles, 14. 200 INDEX. LOSS: vendee liable in case of, 31, 32. who liable in case of rental, 31, 32. terms of contract govern, 33, 34. MANUFACTURED GOODS: what are, 11. 12. all now within Statute, 12, 15, 18, 72, et seq. MANUFACTURER : name of, must be painted on article, 1, 67. See OwNEE, Vendor. address of, must be given, 1, 67. registration of instrument by, 72, 76. effect of non-compliance with the Act, 55. how affected if affixes chattel to realty, ]21. time when name and address must be placed upon chattel, 65. name and address may be " attached." 65. imperfection of Statute as to attaching name, 65. must, on demand, furnish certain information, 9.5. " successor in interest " may take possession, 104. mortgagee of chattel a successor in interest of bailor or manu- facturer, 107. may take possession on breach of condition, 108. right of, in chattel after taking lawful possession, 108. See Possession. MARK : by marksman. See Signing, Signature, &c. MECHANICS' LIEN: registering does not estop owner. 46. MEDICINE : not within Statute, 12, 13, 14. MINERALS : not manufactured articles, 13, 14. MORTGAGE: by bailee, 37. 54. by bailor, 37. MORTGAGEE :— subsequent mortgagee in good faith protected by the Statute, 53. only protected so far as to give effect to his mortgage, 52. means subsequent mortgagee from the bailee or vendee, 54. reason for declaring such instruments inviilid, .'i4. must be one in good faith, 58. collusion by, with vendee to defraud manufacturer, vendor, or owner, vendee's compliance with Act unnecessary, 58 notice in mortgagee not inconsistent with good faith, 58. of simply interest of vendee cannot take advantage of non- compliance with the Statute, 60, 63. INDEX. 201 UORTGAG'EK— Continued. at liberty to shew claim liquidated, 34, 60, 61, 63. or that chattel never subject to claim, 63. who prejudices the interests of vendor to protect his own is still a mortgagee in " good faith," 63, 64. subsiequent mortgagee not required to register his mortgiage under Act relating to bills of sale, etc., so as to maintain priority over instrument not registered under the Act, 64. subsequent mortgagee pro tanto a purchaser. 64. occupies same legal position as a purchaser, 64. of vendee ma.v redeem, 107, 108. MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS : are within the Act, 72. NAME: time at which must be on. 65. effect of obliteration, 65. attachment, method o£, 05, 66. must be exact, 65, 66, 67. NEGLECT : liability of bailee for, 28. to give information must be neglect of vendor, 93. NEGLIGENCE : degrees of, 29. in use of chattel by vendee, 30. when joint bailees, 33. of bailee's servant, 33. to put article to other use than that intended for it. 31 >. NOTE: liability on, if chattel lost, 31. 32. NOTICE : of re-sale necessary, 117, 118. length of, 119. form of, 119. service of, 119, 120. may be given though 20 days not expired, 121. in purchaser or mortgagee may not rebut good faith, 58. OBJECT : of Statute, 17. OPTION : to purchaser not within Statute, 5. ORDERS FOR CHATTELS: statutory requirements as to. 1, 2. ORE: not manufactured article, 13. ORGANS : within Statute, 11. 202 INDEX. OWNER : name of, must be painted, etCi, on the chattel, 1, 67. may be attached, 63. imperfection of the Act in regard to attaching name, 65. time when name, etc.. should be attached, 65. effect of omitting to paint name and to register, 55. though name not placed on chattel, Act complied with, if regis- tration made within 10 days, 72, 76. may take possession for breach of condition, 108. rights of, in chattel after taking possession, 108. Hee Possession, Statute. of soil, as to chattel improperly fixed to realty, 121. OWNERSHIP : Statute only applies when ownership does not pass, 40. when ownership passes, but not possession, then another Statute applies, 40. intention of parties as (o ownership passing decides applicability of Statute, 40. PARTIES : between original parties compliance with Act unnecessary, 51. PAWN : not within Statute, 25. PAYMENT: may be tendered before due, 48. forfeiture for default in may be waived, 48. PENALTY : for refusing information, 99. PHRASES: See Words. PIANOS : within Statute, 11. illegal, when to be used in a house of ill-fame, 27. PLEDGE OR PAWN: not within Statute, 25. definition of. 25. POSSESSION : when retained, xVct does not apply, 9. 10, 11. given subsequent to contnact, effect of, 9. when not as vendee, statute does not apply, 10. change of, necessary, 17. distinguished from right of, 39. does not work estoppel against owner. 45. necessary to lien, 93. vendor re-taking to hold chattels, 104. 108, 116. vendor may re-take when, 108. effect of re-taking on right to price, 108, et seq. INDEX. 203 I'OSSESSIOX— C'0K*miicd. i-e-taking without breach, 113. right to vendee may be implied, 114. how re-taken, 115. recovery o-, when chattel affixed to realty. 131. POST officp:: address must be given by person applying for information, 100, 101. if letter deposited in post office, not necessary to prove that received, 101. if address indistinct and letter miscarry, loss falls on sender, 101. iS'ee Address,- Information, Application. I^RICE : action for, by vendor on breach. 39, 40. reeoveiT o£ balance on re^sale, 51, 108. effect of re-taking possession right to recover, 108. payment of, by owner of realty, 129. PROMISSORY NOTE: effect of taking and discounting. 45, 48. when contract note is not promissory note, 49, 92. PROPERTY : when it does not pass with possession, 1, 2. if it passes. Statute does not apply, 2. whether it passes depends on intention. 40. PURCHASE MONEY: usually in form of rentals, 8. when rentals purchase money, transaction may be one of sale with resen-ation, 8. • construction put thereon by Canadian Courts, 8. effect of Statute thereon, 8. entitled to information, 96. secures priority if name not painted, etc., on instrument filed, 58. See Subsequent Pxjechasbr. as against subsequent purchaser bailment must be in writing, 55, 58. collusion by, with vendee to defraud vendor makes compliance with Act unnecessary, .58. subsequent, in good faith protected by Statute, 53, 58. only so far as to give effect to his purchase, 52. who is a subsequent purchaser in good faith, 60. means subsequent purchaser from the vendee. 54. by miitual assent of parties, 80. not one who unlawfully converts the property, 80. not one in good faith who pays a judgment got against him by vendee, 80. 204 INDEX. I'URCHASB MO^EY— Continued. reason for declaring such instruments invalid, 55. must be one in good faith, 53, 58. notice to, not inconsistent with good faith, 58. bona fide purchaser can only receive protection to extent of his payments, 52, 80. purchase money must be paid, not secured, 80. at sheriff's sale intended to be protected, 80. landlord may become purchaser under the Act. 61, 62. not lafter illegal distress. 61. buying interest of vendee cannot take advantage of Statute, 63. but can shew that vendor's claim satisfied, 63. or that no such claim ever existed, 63. subsequent mortgagee pro twnto a purchaser, 64. occupies same legal position as purchaser, 35. goods affixed to, 121, 122. what constitutes affixing, 122. owner of, may retain chattel affixed. 121. but must pay price, 121, 129. RECEIPT NOTES: for manufactured goods, statutory requirements as to, 1, 4. REDEEM : right of vendee to, 116. his successor may, 116. time for, 116, 117. REDEMPTION : may be had within 20 days, 104, 116. period of 20 days must elapse in all cases, 104. who may redeem, 116. right of redemption can be enfoi'ced in defiance of agreement against such, 117. " REFUSAL :" to give information must be refusal of vendor, 99. REGISTRATION : there must be registration, or else name, etc., painted, etc, 4, 30. effect of omitting both, 55. ten days allowed for registration, 72-74. object of, 17. unauthorized, not sufficient, 76-81. of defective instrument not effective, 81. REMOVAL : of chattel from Province, effect of, 77. RENT: may be treated as payment, 8, 49. distress for, of vendee's interest, 62. INDEX. 205 RENTALS : agreements usually provide for payment of on account of pur- chase money, 4. usually simply instalments of purchase money, 4. construction put thereon by Canadian Courts. 4. effect of Statute thereon, 4. REPLY : See IXFOBMATION. RESIDENCE: what is place of, 77, 78. RE-SALE : notice of necessary, 108, 117. form of notice, 119. RESCISSION : of contract by acts of vendor, 51. RIGHT OF POSSESSION: distinguished from possession, 39. SALE; by one in possession may , not pass title, 10. by bailee of chattel determines bailment, 37. confers no title apart from Statute, 41, 42, 54. by bailor, after possession taken, 117. of interest of bailee, cannot be had until after 20 days, 110. by vendor to another releases vendee, 51. 5 days part of 20 allowed for redemption, 119. proceedings up to sale may be taken prior to expiration of L"> days, 119. unless other special agreement, 51. form of notice, 119. SALE OF GOODS: certain sales not within Statute, 4, 5. of goods cannot be had after possession taken without 5 days' notice being given, 117, 119. the 5 days' notice may be part of the 20 days allowed for re- demption, 119. form of notice of, 119. not obligatory oi} vendor, 119. cannot in any case be had until after 20 days from taking posses- sion, 119. proceedings leading up to sale may be taken prior to expiration, of 20 days, 119. SALT: not manufactured article, 14. SEAL : not necessary, 19. addition of, no effect, 19. 20 1) INDEX. . SERVICE : methods of service, 101-120. when pei-Monal service dispensed with, 120. service by mail, 120. SHALL : meaning of word, 95. SIGNATURE : of vendee or bailee necessary, 69. if made to promissoiy note, doubtful if sufficient to embrace marginal agreement, 68. what is a signature, 69, 70. description of pei-son not a signature. 69, 70. SIGNING : necessary, 19, 68. what is, 69, 70. description of pereon not signature, 70. STATUTES : R. S. O. cap. 149, sec. 1, 1. R. S. O. cap. 149, sec. 2, 72. R. S. O. cap. 149, sec. 3, 87. R. S. O. cap. 149, sec. 4, 88. R. S. O. oap. 149, sec. 5, 91. R. S. O. cap. 149, sec. 6, 95. R. S. O. oap. 149, sec. 7, 100. R. S. O. oap. 149, sec. 8, 104. R. S. O. oap. 149, sec. 9, 117. R. S. O. oap. 149, sec. 10, 121. R. S. O. oap. 170, sec. 31, 62. 6 Edw. VII., cap. 19, 72, 84, 99, 138. 6 Edw. VII., cap. 19, s. 25, 117. STRAW : not manufactured article, 14. plait is manufactured article, 14. SUBSEQUENT : purchasers and mortgagees protected, .j3. purchasers and mortgagee from bailee intended, 54. must be in good faith, 58, 60. may be such with notice, 59. 63. need not have possession, 59. nor have iiimself observed Statute, 60. nor have complied with Bills of Sale Act, 64. only protected to extent of interest, 52, 60. what consideration necessary. 61, 64. may assume liability tor price, 63, 64. INDEX. 20? SUCCESSOR : in interest of manufacturer or vendor, etc., may take possession, 104, 107. who is a successor in interest, 107. of vendee or bailee may redeem cliattel, 116. SUGAR : not manufactured article, 14. SUNDAY : counts as one day, when, 97. TAXES : distress for vendee's, 63. THIRD PARTY; might make a conditional sale, with owner's consent, 104. TIME: when portions of Statute come into force, for filing runs from delivery, 20. computation of, when begins to run, 78. and when ends, 73. runs from execution, not necessiarily from date, 74. when name, etc., must be on, (J5. for giving information, !)3. 98. TITDE : implied warranty of, 35. bailee may dispute, 37. TROVER : when action lies, 38. UNDIVIDED SHARE: sale of, 17. VENDEE : duty of, as to care and use, 30. may commit felony, 37. may maintain action against stranger, 38. may dispute vendor's title, 37. rights of, on breach by vendor, 108, 109, 110. may mortgage or sell his interest, 37. may redeem, 116. what uses may put article to, 30. liable for injury by sub-agent, 30, 31, 71, 72. cannot be agent or vendor under the Act, 71. VENDOR : when cannot recover property or its value, until breach. 38. to furnish information, UT't, 98. to hold chattels retaken 20 days, 104-116. loses priority as against subsequent purchaser or mortgagee, if he fails to register instrument, or comply with .\ct, 4, 30, 55. 308 INDEX. VENDOR— C'o/(«t« lied. deprived of his rislits in chattel by vendee attaching to realty, 12], 136. may mortgage his interest, 37. may sell his interest, 37. his interest liable under execution, 37. address of, must be given, 1, 65. name of, must be giv'en, 1, 65. time when name and address must be placed on chattel, 65. may be attached, 66. if name, etc., attached, registration not uecessai-y, 72. imperfection of Statute, 66. if not placed on chattel at time of sale, yet good if registration made within ten days, 72. must on application furnish certain information, 95, 98. successor in interest may take possession, 104, 107. mortgagee fi-om vendor a successor in interest, 108. isee Possession. WAREHOUSEMAN : goods in hands of, 18. WARRANTY : when may be set up, 34. what implied that suitable for purpose, 35. WAIVER : of breiach, what is, 112. WHEAT : not manufactured article, 14. WITNESS : to contract not necessaiT, 68. WOOD: sawn or split may become manufactured article, 13. AVORDS : ■' shall only be valid as against,'' meaning and effect of, 51. '" payment of the purchase or consideration money," meaning and effect of, 47. " null and void," meaning of, 51. " fraudulent and void," meaning of, .52. ■■ as against," meaning of, 52. " good faith," meaning of, 58. " shall." meaning of, 95. " interested person," meaning of, 96. " person," meaning of, 97. "proper address," what it is, 101, 102. " successor in interest," 108. WRITING : bailment must be in, 26-68. contract must be in, 68.