81 N.Y.S. 1114 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1903
The judgment and order should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to the appellant to abide event.
This was excepted to by plaintiff, and the court was requested to charge “ that to authorize the jury to find that Kinney had implied authority to bind plaintiff by a trade of whisky for cigars, it must be found by them that the authority to make such a trade was practically indispensable to the execution of the duties of said Kinney as plaintiff’s salesman or agent.” The court declined to so charge, and said: “ But I charge as I already have charged, that they must find that it was practically indispensable to * * * obtaining the order.” An exception was taken by plaintiff to this refusal to charge as requested, and to the charge as made.
The charge was clearly erroneous. The jury were told, in effect, that the agent had authority to make the agreement as to the cigars if he could not otherwise procure this order for the whisky. The evidence in the case shows that the defendant refused to purchase the whisky unless the agreement as to the cigars was made. Therefore, under this charge, the jury had no other alternative than to render the verdict they did.
The case referred to does not lay down any such rule as charged.
It was said by the court that “ if the transaction of this business absolutely required the exercise of the power to borrow money in-order to carry it on, then that power was impliedly conferred as an incident to the employment, but it does not afford a sufficient ground for the inference of such a power to say that the act proposed was convenient or advantageous, or more effectual in the transaction of the business provided for, but it must be practically indispensable to the execution of the duties really delegated in order to justify its inference from the original employment.” Here the authority conferred upon the agent being to make sales of liquors for cash or on credit, and to collect accounts, it could not be found that it was indispensable to the performance of the duties imposed upon him to take cigars in payment for the liquors so sold, and even if in this case he could not procure the defendant’s order unless he took the cigars in' payment, that did not confer upon him authority in this particular case to take cigars in payment. It was not necessary that he should take this order at all. He could make sales to others for cash or on credit, and could thus perform the duties imposed upon him as agent. The duty was to sell for cash or on credit wherever he could, and not to sell to any one person, at all hazards, whether he could get cash down or at some future time or not. The trial court entirely misinterpreted the case referred to and the charge made was erroneous.
This error may well have worked injury to the plaintiff’s rights, and calls for a reversal of the judgment and order appealed from and the granting of a new trial.
All concurred.
Judgment and order reversed upon questions of law only, the facts having been examined and no error found therein, and new trial ordered, with costs to the appellant to abide event.