BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?

No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £5, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!



BAILII [Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback]

Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> William Baxter v Bell and Maxwell and Others. [1800] Mor 7_5 (17 December 1800)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1800/Mor07COMPENSATION-RETENTION-004.html
Cite as: [1800] Mor 7_5

[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]


[1800] Mor 5      

Subject_1 PART I.

COMPENSATION - RETENTION.

William Baxter
v.
Bell and Maxwell and Others

Date: 17 December 1800
Case No. No. 4.

If a consignee sell his constituent's goods in his own name, and the purchaser bona fide believe them to be the consignee's property, the purchaser will be entitled, against the true owner claiming the price, to plead compensation on a debt due to him by the consignee.


Click here to view a pdf copy of this documet : PDF Copy

William Baxter, merchant in Dundee, employed James Hutchison junior, merchant in Glasgow, to sell candle wicks for him on commission.

Hutchison had been in the practice of selling part of these candle wicks to Bell and Maxwell, soap and candle makers in Paisley,

The invoices which Hutchison sent along with the candle wicks, bore, simply that they were purchased from him, and did not indicate that he sold them for behoof of a third party.

In return, Bell and Maxwell sometimes sold Hutchison candles for exportation; and, at stated internals, the parties were in the practice of settling accounts, the balance being paid in cash, or by a bill at a short date.

At a settlement which took place between them in April 1794, a balance of £64. 9s. 10d. arose in favour of Bell and Maxwell, for which Hutchison granted his bill, payable in two months.

In October 1794, Baxter sent 99 bags of candle wicks to Hutchison, to be disposed of on the same terms as formerly.

Hutchison sold ten of these bags to Bell and Maxwell, for £42. for which sum he gave them credit in his books. Bell and Maxwell also put the following marking on the bill of Hutchison for £64. 9s. 10d. which then remained unpaid.

“Received ten bags bleached wick, 112 pounds each, at ninepence pound, is forty-two pounds.” (Signed)

“Bell & Maxwell.”

While matters stood thus, Hutchison died, leaving his affairs in disorder, and without having remitted to Baxter the price of the 99 bags of candle wicks; but he had transmitted him an account of the sales of them, with the names of the purchasers.

Baxter accordingly brought an action against all those purchasers who had not paid the price to Hutchison, concluding that they should now be ordained to pay it to him as the owner of the wicks.

Among others, the action was brought against Bell and Maxwell, who in defence stated, That Hutchison owed them a larger sum. They also asserted, in point of fact, that so far from knowing that the wicks which they purchased were the pursuer's property, they bona fide believed them to belong to Hutchison, and farther

Pleaded: The owner of goods entrusted to a third party for sale, must run the risk of the fidelity of his consignee. He cannot transfer this hazard to the bona fide purchaser. The opposite doctrine would be attended with the most ruinous consequences in commercial intercourse. The possession of moveables creates a presumption of property on which the purchaser is under the necessity of acting, and the fraud of the consignee creates no vitium reale in the subject sold; Stair, B. 1. Tit. 12. § 16. Ersk. B. 3. Tit. 3. § 34. 24th January 1672, Boylston, No. 6. p. 15125.

Answered: Compensation does not operate ipso jure; it must be pleaded, and it cannot now be pleaded by the defenders against the pursuer, who is not their debtor, November 1765, Alison, No. 15. p. 15132. Although a factor or mandatary should take a bond in his own name for his constituent's money, this will not give his creditors a right to the sum for which it is granted; 21st January 1781, Morison against the creditors of Stewart, (not reported) and a fortiori, if a factor sell his constituent's goods as his own, he will not thereby become the owner of the price.

The Lord Ordinary assoilzied the defenders; and on advising a reclaiming petition, with answers, the Court, with the exception of one Judge, and on the grounds stated for the defender, adhered to the judgment of the Lord Ordinary.

Lord Ordinary, Craig. Clerk, Menzies. Act. Craigie, Hagart. Alt. H. Erskine, Baird. Fac. Coll. No. 208. p. 477.

The electronic version of the text was provided by the Scottish Council of Law Reporting     


BAILII: Copyright Policy | Disclaimers | Privacy Policy | Feedback | Donate to BAILII
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1800/Mor07COMPENSATION-RETENTION-004.html