| Frederick Maxwell Danson, John Horatio Lloyd - Commercial law - 1830 - 366 pages
...the time of payment, and every thing the seller has to do with them is complete, the property vests in the buyer, so as to subject him to the risk of any accident which may happen to the goods, and the seller is liable to deliver them whenever they are demanded,... | |
| Henry Roscoe - Evidence (Law) - 1831 - 788 pages
...the time of payment, and every thing the seller has to do with them is complete, the property vests in the buyer, so as to subject him to the risk of any accident which may happen to the goods (see Tarling v. Baxter, 6 B. and C. 360), and the seller is liable to... | |
| John William Smith - Law reports, digests, etc - 1841 - 744 pages
...; Ellis v. Hunt, 3 TR 464 ; Hodgson v. Lay, 7 TR 440 ; Inglis v. Usherwood, 1 East, 515 ; Bothlingh v. Inglis, 3 East, 381. Why ? Because the property...insolvency without payment of the price defeats that right. The buyer, or those who stand in his place, may still obtain the right of possession, if they will... | |
| Charles Abbott (Baron Tenterden) - Maritime law - 1846 - 1088 pages
...and insolvency occur, he has a right, in virtue of his original ownership, to stop them in transitu. Why ? Because the property is vested in the buyer,...he has not an indefeasible right to the possession. His insolvency, without payment of the price, defeats that right. The buyer, or those who stand in... | |
| John William Smith - Contracts - 1847 - 438 pages
...and insolvency occurs, he has a right, in virtue of his original ownership, to stop them in transitu. "Why ? Because the property is vested in the buyer,...without payment of the price, defeats that right." The stoppage may generally be made at any time When to stop during the transit. In Stokes v. La Riviere,... | |
| South Carolina. Court of Appeals, James Albert Strobhart - Law reports, digests, etc - 1848 - 616 pages
...any time before they have reached the possession of the buyer. By the contract of sale, in such case the property is vested in the buyer, so as to subject...possession, and his insolvency, without payment of the lie?i, defeats that right. Stoppage in transitu, as the term imports, can only take place while the... | |
| James Kent - Law - 1848 - 1046 pages
...occurs, he has a right, in virtue of his original ownership, to stop them in transitu ; for, though the property is vested in the buyer, so as to subject him to the risk of any accident, he has not an indefeasible right to the possession ; and his insolvency, without payment of the price,... | |
| John William Smith - Contracts - 1853 - 488 pages
...the time of payment, and everything the seller has to do with them is complete, the property vests in the buyer, so as to subject him to the risk of any accident which may happen to the goods, and the seller is liable to deliver them whenever they are demanded... | |
| George Ross - Commercial law - 1855 - 956 pages
...the time of payment, and everything the seller has to do with them is complete, the property vests in the buyer, so as to subject him to the risk of any accident which may happen to the goods, and the seller is liable to deliver them whenever they are demanded... | |
| Conway Robinson - Actions and defenses - 1855 - 884 pages
...the time of payment, and every thing the seller has to do with them is complete, the property vests in the buyer so as to subject him to the risk of any accident which may happen to the goods, and the seller is liable to deliver them whenever they are demanded,... | |
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