incidents which might affect the nature or the validity of the
transaction, but the document itself was still a bill of sale. It was because, by secret documents of this character, without change of possession, the grantors were enabled to keep up the appear- ance of being in good circumstances and possessed of property," while the grantees had "the power of taking possession of the property of such persons to the exclusion of the rest of their creditors" (see the preamble to the original Act, 19 Vict. No. 2), that legislation became necessary.
We are free from doubt that the definition in sec. 3 of the Act of 1898 applies, and that its effect in connection with sec. 5 is to require due registration for the protection of the grantee against the official assignee where and SO far as the security includes chattels capable of complete transfer by delivery, but not to require any registration where no such chattels at all are included: See Bruce &Sons v. McCluskey 1.
The term "bill of sale" is, by sec. 3, made inclusive of a con- siderable variety of personal chattels-meaning goods, furniture, fixtures, and other articles capable of complete transfer by delivery. Whether the document be in form a bill of sale, an assignment, a transfer, a declaration of trust without transfer, or other kind of assurance, or a power of attorney, authority, or licence to take possession as security for any debt, it is still only a bill of sale (requiring registration) to the extent that it deals with "articles capable of complete transfer by delivery." And to make that limitation to articles in esse in possession more dis- tinctly the note of "personal chattels," the definition goes on to exclude various interests, &., and among them choses in action,
But, it is said, the definition of " bill of sale" is not exclusive, and therefore it includes everything that was previously known as a bill of sale. That may be conceded, but we have already pointed out that before the passage of the Acts requiring regis- tration, the term meant nothing more than an assignment of personal chattels in existence. The term with that meaning is fatal to the respondent's contention that, where future property is included, registration is necessary.
In the case of Thomas v. Kelly 2, two at least of the learned
121 V.L.R., 262, at p. 266.
213 App. Cas., 506.