This is an action at law instituted by appellees, E. A. Rolfe, Joe Campbell and Burt Gray, against appellant, F. W. Parker, to recover possession of a stationary engine and a lot of stave-mill machinery. Rolfe claims title to the engine and Campbell claims the other machinery involved in the action. Bach of them bases his respective claim upon an alleged reservation of title in a conditional sale of the property. The causes of action are entirely separate, but no objection was raised below and none is raised here as to that feature of the case. Gray does not claim title to any of the property nor to 'any interest therein, and there is no reason why he should have been made a party; however, there is no objection raised on that score. Counsel for appellant frankly disregards all technical objections and asks that the case be determined on its merits. There was a trial before the court sitting as a jury, and the finding was in favor of each of the appellees, Rolfe and Campbell.
Appellees Campbell and Gray were copartners, engaged in the operation of a stave-mill, and, as such copartners, were the owners of the stave-mill machinery (other than the engine) involved in the controversy. They purchased from Rolfe the engine in controversy under a conditional contract of sale whereby the title was retained by Rolfe until the purchase price should be paid.
In the year 1918 Campbell sold out his interest in the copartnership to Gray, and retired from the firm. There was a written contract between Campbell and Gray, describing the partnership property covered by the contract, which. consisted of a large quantity of staves and other manufactured timber on the yard, and also all of the mill machinery, fixtures, etc., described in detail, and a list of notes and accounts due to the copartnership. The contract recited a cash consideration of *247$15,000, payable $4,500 cash in hand and the balance in seven unequal installments, evidenced by notes, the last of which was for the sum of $500. The contract contained a recital that “it is understood that the property herein conveyed shall be and remain in the said J. M. Campbell until all of the said notes are fully paid, including interest upon the same.” The mill and other property were then situated at Cotton Plant, in Woodruff County, and afterwards Cray formed a partnership with appellant Parker, and the machinery in controversy and other remaining property of the old copartnership became the property of the new firm. It was moved to Louisiana and operated there for a time, and then brought back to Arkansas, and the mill was put in operation by Parker in Desha County, appellee Cray having passed out of the firm.
According to the testimony adduced, Cray made all the payments on his purchase from Campbell, except the last note for $500, which is still unpaid.
It is contended, in the first place, that the evidence is not sufficient to support a finding in favor of appellee Rolfe for the recovery of the engine. It must be conceded that the evidence is somewhat meagre, but we think it is sufficient to support the finding of the court. Rolfe did not testify himself, and the testimony on that branch of the case is confined to that of appellee Cray.
There seems to have been little stress laid in the trial below upon the question whether or not Rolfe had originally owned an interest, and sold it to Campbell or Cray, with reservation of title until the purchase price should be paid, but we think that the evidence is sufficient to establish these facts. Cray testified that the engine belonged to Rolfe, and that it had never been paid for. His testimony on this subject appears in the record as follows: “Q. The engine belongs to Judge Rolfe? A. Yes sir, I never did pay him for it. * * * Q. To whom did it belong? A. Mr. Rolfe. * * * Q. You told him (Parker) that Mr. Rolfe had a title to the engine? A- He knew it all the time, * * * Q. What *248is the value of the engine that belongs to Judge Bolfe? A. I promised to pay him $450 for it.” Appellant practically conceded his liability to Bolfe in the trial below, for, in his examination, he made this statement: “Well, somebody has got to pay Judge Bolfe, and I suppose I will have to pay it. I didn’t know it until I was notified by him. No — come to think of it — I found it out in Louisiana.”
The evidence being sufficient to support the judgment in Bolf’s favor, and, there being no error in the proceedings on that branch of the case, that judgment is affirmed.
The case of appellee Campbell against appellant for recovery of the machinery stands in a different attitude. The question of conditional sales of personal property by retention of title as security for the purchase money has been the subject of many decisions of this court, beginning with the case of Carroll v. Wiggins, 30 Ark. 402, and continuing down to the present time, including the very recent case of Brigham v. Thrailkill, 166 Ark. 548, and we have steadily adhered to the rule that the sale and delivery of personal property on condition that the title is not to pass until payment of the purchase price, does not vest the title in the vendee until the condition is performed, and that the retention of title is enforceable against the purchaser from a -subsequent vendee, even without notice. The substance of the rule and the theory upon which it is‘based was well stated by Chief Justice Cockrill in McIntosh v. Hill, 47 Ark. 363, as follows:
“Possession of personal property is only prim'a facie evidence of title, and the doctrine of caveat ernptor prevails notwithstanding the possession. The prima facie title must yield to the actual title when it is asserted, and the buyer who trusts to appearances must suffer the loss if they prove delusive. If the vendor is estopped from reclaiming his property from an innocent purchaser, there is no principle, as was said in Andrews v. Cox, supra, upon which we could stop,-short of holding that one who had borrowed or hired any personal prop*249erty might divest the true owner of his title, simply by assuming the power to sell. [We think that reason and the overwhelming weight of authority pronounce in favor of the right of the original vendor.’’
In the case of Simpson v. Shackleford, 49 Ark. 63, Judge Battle, speaking for the court,'said:
“The transaction between Butcher and the appellants was a conditioinal sale. No title to the mill passed to him.. Appellees only acquired the conditional title of Butcher. The fact that Butcher was permitted to remain in possession until sold did not estop appellants from claiming and taking possession after appellees purchased. They did not have a right to rely upon Butcher’s possession as conclusive evidence of his title-, and to say they were thereby induced to purchase. His possession was only prima facie evidence of title, and they had no right to treat and -act upon it as higher evidence. To protect themselves it was necessary for them to inquire and ascertain how Butcher held. When Butcher failed to pay the purchase money at the time he agreed to, appellants became entitled to the possession of the mill, even in the hands of a bona fide purchaser, and to sue for and recover it at any time during the period prescribed for the bringing of such suits by the statute of limitations.”
Now, the theory upon which the vendee is permitted to assert a superior claim over that of a purchaser from his vendee is that the legal title was originally in the vendor -and never passed out of him. But this rule necessarily implies that the legal title must be in the vendor. Unless one has the title already, he cannot retain it. The turning point in the present case therefore is whether or not Campbell ever had legal title which he could retain, subject to the condition of the final payment of the purchase price. The evidence is undisputed that, the title to the property in controversy was in a copartnership composed of Campbell and Gray. Neither of the partners had the legal title, but each owned an equity, Which was “only the right to share in the surplus remaining after the debts were paid and the partnership affairs *250adjusted.” Ringo v. Wing, 49 Ark. 457. It follows therefore that Campbell, having no legal title to the property in controversy, could not retain title as security for the purchase price. The contract between him and Gray was not either an acquisition or retention of the legal title, but' merely constituted a sale and transfer of his equity.in the partnership assets. This interest was extinguished by the sale to Gray, and the title held by the partnership became vested in Gray as the successor of the copartnership, and he had both the legal and equitable right to dispose of the property. The sale to Parker, or to the new firm composed of himself and Parker, constituted a transfer of title. The attempted reservation of title by Parker was ineffective, and the trial court erred in holding that he was entitled to recover possession.
The judgment in favor of appellee Campbell is therefore reversed, and his action dismissed.