2 Indian Terr. 18 | Ct. App. Ind. Terr. | 1898
This case was decided by this court April 2, 1897. The opinion of the court is printed in 1 Ind. Ter. 233-244. At a subsequent term of the court a petition for rehearing was granted, and the case was reheard at the January, 1898, term, on oral argument, and resubmitted on tne original briefs, with additional citations of authority. The principal contention of counsel for the American Express Company, appellant in this case, urged as a ground for reversing the decision of the court, is on account of the statement in the opinion that the husband is the natural and presumptive agent in law of the wife. This statement was limited by the one which immediately follows in the opinion, viz.: “The agency of the husband will be implied when the wife accepts or makes an effort to secure the benefit resulting from the transactions of the husband, the circumstances and tendencies of proof in view of the relationship of the parties indicating an agency, or when the husband is the ostensible agent of the’wife. Milligan vs Davis, 49 Iowa 126,” — and by .section 4637 of Mansfield’s Digest.
Exception was also taken to the following statement in the opinion of the court: “It was also competent for Lank-ford to testify to the fact of his agency, which he did, and stated that he was acting as the agent of his wife.” The opinion cites section 2859 of Mansfield’s Digest, which states under what circumstances the husband or wife may testify for or against the other. Section 4637 of Mansfield’s Digest