160 P. 741 | Idaho | 1916
This is an action brought by the appellant against R. F. Kercheval, public administrator, and as such administrator of the estate of "Wilson Kistler, deceased, to recover the sum of $29,548, together with interest on $24,480 thereof since the first day of November, 1913. This appeal is from a judgment of dismissal entered upon a motion for non-suit. The only error assigned and complained of is that ‘ ‘ The court erred in granting the motion for a nonsuit and in entering judgment thereon.”
The main facts in this case, briefly stated, are as follows:
One Wilson Kistler, of Lock Haven, Pennsylvania, was a stockholder in the Spokane and Inland Empire Railway Company, a corporation organized by the appellant herein and one J. P. Graves of Spokane. In January, 1909, the appellant sold his stock in the above-named corporation, and advised Kistler to dispose of his, but he decided not to sell. During that year, Graves, who had purchased not only the stock of the appellant but also other blocks of stock, sold his holdings, which constituted the control of the Spokane and Inland Empire Railway Company, to the Great Northern Railway Company.
Kistler visited Idaho in May, 1909, and after looking over the property of- the Blackwell Lumber Company concluded to and did purchase $25,000 worth of stock in said company, and at the date of said purchase stated to one Schenker, private secretary to Blackwell, the appellant herein, that he hoped that Blackwell would be able to dispose of his (Kistler’s) stock in the Spokane and Inland Empire Railway Company ; that he desired to turn that investment and take additional stock in the Blackwell Lumber Company. To this end Kistler, by numerous letters, urged Blackwell to dispose of his (Kistler’s) stock in the Spokane and Inland Empire Railway Company, that he might invest in stock of the Blackwell Lumber Company. After some correspondence between Blackwell and Kistler relative to the disposal of the latter’s
“I have accepted this note and turned the same over to the Blackwell Lumber Co. Mr. Davidson is worth the, money and I think will meet the note. That is a chance the Blackwell Lumber Co. has taken, or rather that I tooTc, as I have indorsed the note.”
Thereafter in the course of his letter he asked Kistler to send his check for $520 more, which, together with the $24,480, would complete his purchase of $25,000 of the capital stock of the Blackwell Lumber Company, and upon receipt of which, Blackwell said: “I will turn that over to the Blackwell Lumber Co., and this will close up the transaction.”
On November 8, 1909, Kistler answered Blackwell’s letter of November 2, 1909, and among other things in the letter stated that he inclosed a draft for $520 in accordance with Blackwell’s request, and further on in the letter said: “I hardly expected that you would take the trouble in closing up the matter and go as far as you did in reaching a conclusion where a body might have supposed that there would have been enough interest with the representatives of the Inland Empire Railroad Co. to at least have made an effort to protect innocent stockholders. I would not expect that you should take any chances in the closing of this matter, and if in the future anything should turn up with this that would cause you any inconvenience, if you will please let me know, I will take the matter up and see that you are fully protected. ’ ’
The note given by Davidson to Blackwell, for $24,480, and discounted at the Old National Bank of Spokane, Washington, was not paid at maturity, but was renewed from time to
On September 21, 1910, Blackwell wrote to Kistler about other business matters, and in his letter among other things he used the following language: “In connection with this I might add that I am likely to have to take back the Spokane & Inland stock which I thought I had sold for you, think it was 510 shares.....Mr. Davidson, secretary of the company gave me a letter agreeing to take this stock off my hands. He expected to put it in the sale that J. P. Graves and himself made to the Hill interests. As the stock was not here to put in the first lot sent in to the Hill interests, it together with Mr. Grinnell’s and a lot of other holdings, was made into a second statement. Davidson and Graves expected that Hill would take that also, but up to this writing he has never done so.
“Mr. Davidson gave me his three [two] months’ note for the stock, which note has been twice renewed. Personally he is not worth the amount and now he wants me to take the stock back. I do not know how the matter will come out.
“While I consider the stock perhaps a good buy at $48 per share, I would very much prefer Blackwell Lumber Co. stock at par, besides that the Lumber Company needs the money.”
In 1911, approximately a year later, Blackwell addressed another letter to Kistler, in which he used the following language with reference to the Inland stock transaction: “In connection with this, I might also state that I have never yet gotten my money for the Inland stock which I took up for you and for which you received stock of the Blackwell Lumber Co. (paid for in cash by me), Mr. Graves having failed to come through with the purchase of same as anticipated. The common stock of the Inland E'mpire road is now quoted at about $15.00, so you see I am holding the sack in that transaction. However, in that yon are not to blame, and I am not complaining. I merely state the fact to show that we are trying to act fair with all our friends.”
Mr. Kistler died about the month of January, 1914, and some time thereafter R. F. Kercheval was appointed as the administrator of his estate.
It will be conceded in this case at the outset that when Blackwell sold the Kistler stock in the Inland Company and took a note in payment in lieu of cash, he thereby exceeded his authority and thereupon became liable to Kistler for the value of the stock. It is from this liability that Blackwell seeks to be relieved and reimbursed upon the theory that Kistler, subsequent to the sale of the stock, agreed, in effect, to assume the Davidson note, in his letter to Blackwell of date November 8, 1909, and by his failure to reply to Blackwell’s letter of September 21, 1910, as well as by his subsequent acts and conduct, all of which acts and conduct counsel for respondent contend constituted a ratification of Blackwell’s unauthorized act.
The trial court, after hearing all of the evidence offered by appellant, reached the conclusion that it failed to establish a ratification, and thereupon granted respondent’s motion for a nonsuit. The correctness of the court’s holding is the sole question presented for review by this appeal.
Ratification as used in the law of principal and agent may be defined as the acceptance and confirmation by one person
The fact that the agent was not fully informed, or was honestly mistaken, as to what the actual facts really were, will not ordinarily change the rule.
Counsel for' appellant first contend in their brief that Kistler by his express warranty in his letter of date November 8, 1909, ratified the unauthorized act of appellant in the sale of Kistler’s stock, or, in other words, we might say that counsel insist that Kistler in his letter of the above date expressly and unqualifiedly promised and undertook to save Blackwell harmless when he was informed by Blackwell in his letter of November 2, 1909, that he had sold his Inland stock and taken a note therefor in lieu of cash. If Kistler’s letter is subject to such a construction, when construed in the light of subsequent correspondence between Blackwell and Kistler, relating to the sale of the latter’s Inland stock, counsel’s contention would be eminently correct, but a careful examination of the entire record forces us to the conclusion that Kistler’s letter of November 8, 1909, is not subject to the construction contended for by counsel for appellant. It is quite evident that Kistler at the time he wrote the letter of date November 8, 1909, was not in possession of all of the material facts connected with the sale of his Inland stock, and in this connection we do not wish to impute to Blackwell the intentional suppression of any of the material facts. In reaching a deci
It would be inconsistent to presume that had Kistler known the foregoing facts he would have written Blackwell on November 8, 1909, as follows: “I would not expect that you should take any chances in the closing of this matter, and if in the future anything should turn up with this that would cause you any inconvenience, if you will please let me know, I will take the matter up and see that you are fully protected.” The above statement by Kistler in his letter was based solely upon what was contained in Blackwell’s letter of November 2,1909.
Had Blackwell told Kistler in his letter of November 2, 1909, that he had sold the stock to Davidson personally ■ that without authority he had accepted Davidson’s, note for the purchase price in lieu of. cash; that Davidson was not financially responsible; that Graves had not legally bound himself to pay for the stock; and that whatever chance there was to be taken in the transaction Kistler would be required to take; and then had Kistler, being in possession of all of the material facts, written to Blackwell and said, “If in the future anything should turn up with this that would cause you any inconvenience, if you will please let me know I will take the matter up and see that you are fully protected,” there is no question but that he would be bound.
When we consider the information that was given to Kistler and the facts as they really were which were unknown to him, we find no difficulty in applying the correct rule of law to the facts in this case, which is that before the principal
The rule is well stated in Clark & Skyles on Agency, vol. 1, p. 268, ‘ ‘ That the ratification of an act of an agent previously unauthorized must, in order to bind the principal, be with a full knowledge of all of the material facts. If the material facts be either suppressed or unknown, the ratification is treated as invalid, because founded in mistake or fraud. The general rule is perfectly well settled that a ratification of the unauthorized acts of an agent, in order to be effectual and binding on the principal, must have been made with a full knowledge of all the material facts, and that ignorance, mistake or misapprehension of any of the essential circumstances relating to the particular transaction alleged to have been ratified will absolve the principal from all liability by reason of any supposed adoption of or assent to the previously unauthorized act of an agent.” (Findlay v. Hildenbrand, 17 Ida. 403, 105 Pac. 790, 29 L. R. A., N. S., 400; Bank of Owensboro v. Western Bank, 13 Bush (Ky.), 526, 26 Am. Rep. 211.)
It is next contended by counsel for appellant that Kistler, with full notice and knowledge that the agent had accepted the note from Davidson, and had indorsed and discounted it, accepted the benefits of the negotiation and sale of the Davidson note, and received and held the stock of the Blackwell Lumber Company which was purchased as the result of that negotiation; that these facts were communicated to Kistler in
“I am likely to have to take back the Spokane and Inland stock which I thought I had sold for you, think it was 510 shares. And the story in connection with this is quite a long one. Mr. Davidson, secretary of the company, gave me a letter agreeing to take this stock off my hands. He expected to put it in the sale that J. P. Graves and himself made to the Hill interests. As the stock was not here to put in the first lot sent in to the Hill interests, it together with Mr. Grinnell’s and a lot of other holdings, was made into a second statement. Davidson and Graves expected that Hill would take that also, but up to this writing he has never done so.
“Mr. Davidson gave me his three [two] months’ note for the stock, which note has been twice renewed. Personally he is not worth the amount, and now he wants me to take the stock back. I do not know how the matter will come out.
“While I consider the stock perhaps a good buy at $48 per share, I would very much prefer Blackwell Lumber Co. stock at par, besides that the Lumber Company needs the money.”
As above stated, counsel insist that the letter above quoted constitutes a ratification of Blackwell’s unauthorized act in selling the Kistler stock and taking a note therefor in lieu of cash, and that it was the duty of Kistler in order to relieve himself from such ratification to have immediately upon receipt of the above letter, which counsel insist informed him of all of the material facts, to have at once written Blackwell and stated to him in substance: “Now that I find out that Davidson is not worth the money, I do not ratify your first contract and do not agree to hold you harmless.” In other words, it was the duty of Kistler either to repudiate promptly the acts of Blackwell, or he must be held to have ratified such acts by remaining silent.
This last letter, it will be remembered, was written a considerable time after Blackwell’s letter of November 2, 1909, in which he told Kistler that he had accepted the Davidson note and turned it over to the Blackwell Lumber Company; that Davidson was worth the money; that he thought he would
This letter was followed by Blackwell’s letter of July 17, 1911, in which he wrote to Kistler, among other things, that Graves had failed to come through with the purchase of the Inland stock as anticipated and that common stock of the Inland company was quoted at $15.00, “So you see I am holding the sack in that transaction. However, in that you are not to blame and I am not complaining. ’ ’
It is necessary to construe the correspondence as a whole in order to determine its meaning and the intention of the parties.
As a matter of fact, we think that a fair construction of the letter above set out, and others in the record, does not in any way indicate that Blackwell intended to hold Kistler personally responsible for the failure of Davidson to meet his obligation. The letters when considered in connection with other correspondence between Blackwell and Kistler, with regard to this stock transaction, bear out but one construction, and that'is that when Blackwell sold the Inland stock to Davidson he was acting for himself and not for Kistler, and that he was willing at that time to assume the risk, if any, incident to such transaction.
As early as July 30, 1909, Kistler wrote to Blackwell, and among other things he said: “I hope that my stock of the Spokane Inland Railroad can be soon turned, as I wish to place the same with the Blackwell Lumber Co.” On the eleventh day of August, 1909, Blackwell wrote to Kistler and in his letter will be found the following: “If you can see your way clear to take some more Blackwell Lumber Co. stock [meaning in addition to the $25,000 he then already had],
It is therefore clear that it was Kistler’s intention to sell his Inland stock, and to invest the proceeds received therefrom in Blackwell Lumber Company stock, and that Blackwell understood that Kistler would buy additional Blackwell Lumber Company stock provided he could sell his Inland stock and not otherwise, and Blackwell, in order that this deal might be consummated, in the interest of his company, was ready and willing to take a chance, which at that time he evi
The proof in the record strongly supports the idea that Blackwell was reasonably satisfied that Graves, while he would not obligate himself to pay for the stock, would be able to dispose of it to the Hill interests. It is likewise apparent that Davidson was not in a position at the time to purchase the Inland stock and pay cash for the same, and the record shows that he so informed Blackwell at the date of the expiration of the original note, if not earlier. Blackwell and Davidson both, no doubt, honestly believed at the time of the Inland stock transaction that Graves would put the deal through for them, and it was understood, pending the final consummation of the deal, that Davidson would pay the interest on the original note, which he did.
Counsel for respondent are again reinforced in their position that the transaction was a personal one on behalf of Blackwell’s company by that portion of the record which shows that when Davidson ceased to pay the interest on the original transaction, Blackwell did not write to Kistler and request him (Kistler) to pay the interest and renew the note, or take up the note, but he again went to Davidson and they agreed to divide up the original note into two notes, one of which Blackwell retained personally and the other he discounted at the Old National Bank, and continued to pay the interest as it accumulated and to renew the note of $12,000 at the Old National Bank from time to time, without calling upon Kistler, during his lifetime, to take up any part of this indebtedness, or to pay the interest thereon, or to return the stock of the Blackwell Lumber Company. This demand was not made until some time after Kistler’s death. This being a personal transaction between Blackwell and Davidson, and intended as such, there could be neither express ratification nor implied ratification by retention of benefits.
The fact that the principal received or enjoyed benefits of the unauthorized acts of an agent will not amount to a ratification if he did so in ignorance of the facts, nor will his retention of such benefits after knowledge of the facts amount
Counsel for appellant in their reply brief strenuously contend that the court committed reversible error, in taking upon himself the right to place a construction upon the letters introduced in evidence, under the facts in this case. These letters were Offered for the sole purpose of establishing a ratification of an unauthorized act of an agent, and it was clearly the duty of the court to construe them for the purpose of determining whether they showed or tended to show a ratification, and if, from the construction placed upon the letters and other facts and circumstances testified to and appearing upon the trial, there was a total failure of proof to establish a ratification, it was the imperative duty of the trial court to so hold. Whether the court properly construed the letters is another question, but that he had a right to construe them there can be no doubt. From an examination of the record in this case the right of the appellant to recover depends upon the construction of these letters. It is true that the complaint alleges certain acts and conduct upon the part of Kistler, that, had they been proven upon the trial, we are strongly persuaded to believe would have been sufficient to render his estate liable. When this case was before this court upon a former hearing (Blackwell v. Kercheval, 27 Ida. 537, 149 Pac. 1060) upon a general demurrer to the complaint, we held that the complaint was sufficient, but upon the trial appellant failed to prove the allegations of his complaint; consequently the trial court was forced to determine this case upon the testimony as finally submitted, and in doing so was clearly within his rights when he construed the correspondence, as well as all of the evidence submitted by the -appellant, and we think that the conclusions reached by the trial court are correct.
From what has been said, it follows that the court did not err in dismissing appellant’s action and granting respondent’s motion for a nonsuit. The judgment of the trial court must