Charles Scribner’s Sons, of New York, brought an action against A. L. Bancroft, of San Francisco, to recover moneys claimed to be due, and liquidated damages for the breach of two certain contracts for the sale by subscription of certain books which they had published. The trial resulted in a judgment for the plaintiffs for the recovery of the liquidated damages, in the sum of $7,734.49.
There are three principal assignments of error. The first is that the court instructed the jury that the contracts were not assignable by Bancroft. From the bill of exceptions, it appears that on January 31, 1890, Bancroft, under his ton name of A. L. Bancroft & Co., wrote to Scribners, soliciting the agency of Stanley’s book, “In Darkest Africa,” which was about to be published. The letter sets forth in detail the qualifications of the writer’s firm; alludes to the fact that that firm are not publishers, and that their whole time and attention are given to the sale of subscription books. It explains their facilities for securing the largest possible sale, and” states that they are young, full of energy, and possess ample capital, and a
From a consideration of all the correspondence*, and the circumstances connected therewith, it is apparent that the contract was purely one of agency, and that it rested upon personal considerations. The agent was selected with great care. Both parties to the contract evidently believed that the success of the publication, and the extent of its sale, depended upon the experience, skill, and energy, as well as the resources and the facilities, of the general agent; that upon his integrity and responsibility depended the pecuniary profit of the investment. It was not in any sense a contract for the sale of goods. Bancroft was not a purchaser of the books. The books remained the property of the publishers until they passed into the possession of the subscribers. At no time did a title in them vest in the agent. His interest was a commission upon the subscription money, — upon the purchase price received from the subscribers. Bancroft had proceeded under the contract until June 1, 1891. At that time he was indebted to Scribners in more than
It is urged that conceding the contract: of credit to have been one of confidence and trust, and therefore not assignable, so as t.o release Bancroft fr'om his obligation, nevertheless he might transfer his interest to another, and thereafter sustain the relation of surety for that other. To this it may be said that the only information afforded in the bill of exceptions concerning the nature of the transfer is that it was an absolute one. There was nothing to indicate that Bancroft remained surety for Stuart, and, if he were such surety, it is impossible to see how that fact would alter the relations between Scribners and their general agent. Scribners, throughout the correspondence, refused to recognize Stuart, and they undoubtedly had the right to hold their agent to a compliance with his contract, or, in default thereof, to disregard the transfer to any other.
Error is assigned to the refusal of the court to charge, in substance, that the delegation by an agent: of the authority conferred upon him may in any cast; be ra lifted by the principal, and that such ratification may be shown by words or acts, or by acts in spite of words to the contrary, or by proof of flu; acceptance of the benefits of the transaction concerning which the authority was delegated, and that the ratification of a part of an indivisible contract is the ratification of the whole. The only facts in the case which tended to prove ratification by Scribners of the transfer to Stuart was the fact that Scribners failed to answer certain letters which Stuart wrote them, and the fact that on October 1, 1891, they received from him a remittance of §2,413.75, which they passed to Bancroft’s credit.
The third assignment is that the court erred in instructing the jury in regard to the contract for damages. The contracts provided that “in case of his failure to take subscriptions, make requisitions, or remit for the total number of copies herein guarantied within one year” Bancroft should pay, as liquidated damages, the contract price, less the cost to Scribners‘of the production, and the amount of his commissions. In other words, the parties liquidated the damages to be paid by Bancroft in case of breach of his contract, and fixed as the measure thereof the amount of the profits which would thereby be lost to the publishers. It will not be necessary in this case to enter into a consideration of the question whether this clause of the contract provides for liquidated damages, or for a penalty. The defendants in error did not rely solely upon the agreed liquidation of their damages, but upon the trial they introduced evidence of the actual damages they had sustained. They proved that, by the failure cf the plaintiff in error to carry out his contract, they were left with the books upon their hands, and that the books were by that, time unsalable, owing to the decline of the public interest in the Stanley expedition, and that they could not be sold at the cost of their manufacture. The plaintiff in error made no effort to rebut or contradict this evidence, and introduced no proof whatever upon the subject. Under this state of the evidence, the court would have been justified in instructing the jury that, in case they found a verdict for the plaintiffs in the action, the amount thereof should be the full extent of the damages so proven. The judgment will be affirmed, with costs to the defendants in error.