13 Pa. Super. 143 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1900
Opinion by
An agent of plaintiffs, on August 30, 1890, delivered to the defendant, a common carrier, at Kane, a lot of butter in tubs, consigned to B. E. Cartwright at Brockport, on the Toby branch of the New York, Lake Erie & Western Railroad. The line of transportation of the defendant company did not reach Brock-
The testimony upon which the plaintiffs relied to escape the bar of the statute of limitations was alleged to establish a promise to pay made by W. W. Dauman, an employee of the defendant company, Avho was designated as a “ route agent.” The question of the authority of this agent of the defendant company to bind his principal by such a promise would be pivotal of the case if the testimony as to his promise Avas sufficient. The plaintiffs, in order to show the authority of Dauman, offered in evidence a letterhead used by him, upon Avhich was printed “ Adams Express Company, Pennsylvania Department, W. W. Dauman, Route Agent,” and they called a witness who testified that Dauman Avas a route agent but they offered no evidence Avhatever as to the character and extent of the duties and powers attached to that position. There was evidence that he had been seen to enter express cars while the train was in motion, and had been seen about the offices of the express company at railroad stations. Outside of his action in the present case the plaintiffs produced no evidence whatever as to the character of the powers delegated to this employee of the company. The defendant put Dauman upon the stand and he testified as to the powers, duties and responsibilities of his office: “ Q. What is your business ? A. I check up offices, trace lost goods, solicit business and look after tram messengers.” It was not denied
It may well be questioned whether the nature of the office and the evidence as to its powers would have been sufficient to sustain the finding that Dauman had authority to bind the company for a new debt, but the authority which the plaintiffs must establish in this case is much more comprehensive. When an agent is authorized to carry on a particular business he may make such contracts as are necessary to its operation, and his principal will be bound. The liability is immediate, and the principal must comply with the contract according to its terms and pay when due. The duty of the agent is to carry on the business operation committed' to him, and he is held out to the world as representing his principal in that matter. When he makes a purchase of supplies to be used in the business it is for the benefit of his principal, who receives the fruits of it, and the law implies a promise on the part of the principal to pay in accordance with the terms of the bargain. When the debt becomes due an entirely different question is presented; the renewal of it is not a matter of the operation of the business committed to the care of the agent, nor is it an exercise of the power of the agent to create new debts ; a new promise to pay is an extension of the liability of the principal beyond the duration affixed to it by law. “A debt maybe taken out of the statute by the act of an agent done in the regular course of his business if he has specific authority for that purpose, or if such authority be necessarily implied from the nature of his duties, but this results not from the power to create new debts but from a distinct and independent power to settle and adjust old ones. These powers are not in their nature the same, nor very much alike. The one is not a logical nor legal consequence of the other: ” Watts v. Devor, 1 Grant, 267. If there had been any evidence from which .it might have been fairly inferred that
Even if the evidence had warranted a finding that Dauman had authority to bind his principal by a promise to pay for the lost goods, the evidence of that promise is wholly insufficient to avoid the bar of the statute of limitations. There is no unconditional promise to pay; there is no statement of any amount to be paid, no reference to anything by which the amount could be definitely ascertained. “We will bear his expenses and we will stand between you and loss, but we don’t want suit.” “ That would be the earlier meetings; later on insisting that we should bring suit against the Erie Railroad, the connecting line, to recover from them this butter, if they won’t pay us he would, his company.” “We will find the butter, or we will do so and so. We will yet find some trace of this butter or we will make it good.” These three alleged promises made at different times are all the material out of which the plaintiffs must construct their bar to the statute of limitations. The first does not admit liability and does not promise to pay; the second was an agreement to pay in case suit was brought against the Erie Railroad and the money was not received from that quarter, and here again there was no admission of liability; the third did not imply liability, and was simply a suggestion that they would make a settlement with the plaintiffs in case they did not find where the butter was. Dauman was all this time asserting that the consignee had received the butter, and at none of the conversations did he admit that the Adams Express Company had failed to deliver the butter to the connecting line. The plaintiffs wholly failed to escape the bar of the statute: Weaver v. Weaver, 54 Pa. 152; Linderman v. Pome
It is entirely unnecessary to consider the specifications of error which, relate to the admission of testimony and the refusal of the court to strike it out on motion. Evidence to establish the fact of agency must necessarily be introduced in successive steps, and it is impossible for the court to determine its sufficiency to warrant submission of the question to the jury until after all the evidence is in. As the conclusion of the whole matter, the defendant asked for binding instructions, which raised the question of the sufficiency of the evidence to warrant the submission to the jury of the existence of every fact essential to plaintiffs’ case. The force of an appeal is not always dependent upon the number of the assignments of error. The assignment of error which we have sustained, determines the whole case.
Judgment reversed.