59 Wash. 336 | Wash. | 1910
The appellants Clark are the owners of certain real property in the city of Seattle on which they constructed a dwelling. At the time the house'was in the process of construction, defendant Fraser was the manager of the Enterprise Plumbing Company, and as such manager contracted with the Clarks to furnish the necessary materials and to do certain plumbing required by the plans of the house. After he had partially performed his contract he informed the appellants that the balance of the material to complete the
The record does not disclose the ground upon which the trial judge rested his 'decision, and we are not otherwise advised as to the reasons he deemed controlling. The respondent’s learned counsel, however, argue upon the theory that the check was a negotiable instrument coming into the respondent’s hands for value and in due course, and that it, as a bona fide holder thereof, was in no manner liable to account to the appellants therefor. On this question they say in the brief:
*338 “The check came into plaintiff’s hands in due course of business for a valuable consideration and without notice of any irregularity whatever. It was deposited in the bank, the-amount thereof collected and passed to plaintiff’s credit. Let us suppose that the additional supplies for which lien is-claimed had not been furnished. In that event would Mr. Clark be in a position to sue plaintiff and recover $33.29,' the-amount now in dispute? Manifestly he could recover nothing, for the check having come into plaintiff’s hands for a valuable consideration, without notice of any irregularity whatsoever, became plaintiff’s property and plaintiff’s rights, thereunder could have been enforced by suit, if necessary. . .
“This check was not received by plaintiff as a loan; it was-not received by plaintiff to be held for Mr. Clark’s benefit. Plaintiff is not in the banking business and is entitled to have-its wishes consulted before receiving money from its customers for goods to be purchased later and for which money it must account. So far as plaintiff was informed and so far as the record in the case goes, plaintiff at the time it accepted this check had no intimation that it would be called" upon to furnish additional materials for the dwelling. When the check was presented to the plaintiff, disposition of the-proceeds was made exactly as was requested by Mr. Clark’s agent, Mr. Fraser. Mr. Clark’s account was entirely extinguished and full value was given for the amount represented by the check. This was as far as plaintiff was obliged1 to go.”
The question presented by the record is indeed somewhat novel, but it has seemed to us that it cannot be solved by reference to the laws relating to negotiable instruments. The-respondent was in no sense a- purchaser of the check, nor was it a holder thereof in due course, as that phrase is defined in commercial law; it was the payee named in the check, and its obligations to the "drawer of the check were like those of payees in checks generally, it was obligated to account to the drawer for the check or for its proceeds.' The general' rule in this respect was not changed by the fact that the respondent was a stranger to the drawer and did not know the purposes for which the check was forwarded to it. If it did not care to assume the responsibility of accounting, it should!
Having a duty then to account for the check, the question remains, did it so account when it appropriated it to Fraser’s, use. It seems to us that it did not. It is true that Fraser was the appellants’ agent for a special purpose, and it is true also that the respondent, since it was not informed of the special limitations upon his powers, had the right to assume that his powers were such as the circumstances surrounding the transaction made them appear to be. But we think it too much to say that these circumstances were of such a nature as to warrant the belief that the property in the check was the property of Fraser. The check itself contained a distinct warning to the contrary. It was made payable to the respondent, a stranger to the drawer, and not to Fraser, and it is not reasonable to suppose that Fraser would have accepted payment of an obligation due himself in a form which he could not use without the consent and co-operation of a third person. Fraser, moreover, as the respondent well knew, was without credit with the respondent, or elsewhere, and the fact that a person is not to be trusted financially is. some evidence at least that his purported statements of fact are not to be believed when they run contrary to ordinary business dealings. A person dealing with an agent must not act negligently, but must use reasonable diligence to ascertain whether the agent acts within the scope of his powers. He is not authorized under any circumstances to blindly trust the’
The case is not altered by the fact that the respondent had sold Fraser certain supplies which had been used in the construction of the appellants’ building. The appellants did not know this fact, and the respondent had no reason to believe that the appellants knew it. In determining whether an agent acts within the apparent scope of his authority, the acts of the principal alone are to be considered. The principal is responsible only for that appearance of authority which is caused by himself, and not for that appearance of conformity to the authority which is caused by the agent. 2 Enc. L. & P. 960.
The judgment appealed from is reversed, and the cause remanded with instructions to enter a judgment in favor of the appellants to the effect that the respondent take nothing by its action, and that the appellants recover their costs.
Rudkin, C. J., Chadwick, Morris, and Gose, JJ., concur.