If the purchaser defaults in the payment of the purchase price, as fixed in the contract of sale, the primary relief to the seller, as against buyer personally, is the right to sue for the contract price. This is usually the only remedy that remains to the seller, where the goods are sold on credit, and the purchaser vested with title to the same by delivery, where there is not such fraud in the contract, as would give the right to avoid it. The right to sue matures at the expiration of the time given the buyer to pay for the goods. The seller may, however, the terms of the contract so providing, hold the goods as bailee, claim his lien, and also sue for the purchase price.1 The right to the seller is likewise not lost by his exercising his right of stoppage in transitu, provided he still holds himself in readiness to deliver the goods to the purchser, on the purchaser making payment for the goods.2