49 A. 103 | N.H. | 1900
The contract of an agent binds his principal only (1) when he authorizes his agent to make it, (2) when he gives the person dealing with his agent reason to believe that he has authorized it, and (3) when he ratifies it.
The testimony of the plaintiffs witnesses as to what Brown said respecting his authority when he made this settlement was inadmissible to prove that he was authorized to make it, for an agent's authority to make a particular contract cannot be proved by showing that he said he was authorized to make it; so there was no direct evidence of Brown's authority to act for the defendants. The only facts shown which tended to prove that he had such authority were their holding him out as their claim agent, and recognizing this settlement so far as to pay the money he promised and to furnish work for a time. Although these facts tend to prove that he was authorized to promise money, and work for a limited time, in settlement of such claims, they have no tendency to prove that he was authorized to promise anything else; for although the authority of an agent to make a particular contract *528
may be proved by showing specific instances of the business he is accustomed to transact for his principal, the jury can only find from such evidence an authority to make contracts which are similar to those he is shown to have made. Gillis v. Bailey,
There is no evidence that the plaintiff had a right to believe that Brown was authorized to make this settlement, for the only thing the defendants are shown to have done which tended to prove that Brown had any authority to act for them was to hold him out as their claim agent. Giving this fact the construction claimed for it by the plaintiff, Brown was their general agent, to settle claims. The duties of a claim agent are not prescribed by law, and it is not matter of common knowledge that they' are entrusted with greater authority than other general agents. Such agents are only clothed, as a matter of law, with authority to employ the usual and ordinary means of accomplishing that for which the agency was created. Backman v. Charlestown,
There is no evidence that the defendants have ratified this settlement. Paying the money Brown promised and furnishing a part of the work did not amount to a ratification unless they knew, or ought to have known, when they did so, that Brown's promise to give the plaintiff steady employment constituted a part of the consideration for this settlement; for a principal only ratifies such of the unauthorized acts of his agents *529
as he adopts with a knowledge of all the facts essential to an understanding of his rights. Gould v. Blodgett,
The defendants are not trying to set up this settlement as a defence to an action to recover damages for the plaintiff's injury, but he is seeking to enforce it. So the question of whether they can keep its benefit and escape its burden is not here.
Exception overruled.
PIKE, J., did not sit: the others concurred. *530