Brown v. Mahurin

39 N.H. 156 | N.H. | 1859

Fowler, J.

The auditor’s report finds substantially that the plaintiff sold and delivered to the defendant, through his agent, the hay, and rendered for the defend.ant, through his agent, the services, to recover the value *159of which this action is brought, upon an agreement of the defendant, through the same agent, that said hay and services should be paid for in goods from the defendant’s store, kept by that agent; that, in pursuance of that agreement, the plaintiff received of the defendant 'goods to a greater amount than the value of the hay and services ; but that the defendant, instead of fulfilling his agreement, disregarded the same, sued the plaintiff- for the goods, and, though requested so to do by the plaintiff’s attorney on the trial of the action, neglected and refused to allow the plaintiff for the hay and services in part payment of the goods, recovered judgment for the whole amount of the goods, and subsequently collected that judgment of the plaintiff. The plaintiff, then, having thus paid the defendant in full, in cash, for the goods, in part payment for which it was agreed by the defendant that his hay and services should be received, now asks that the-defendant may be compelled to pay him the sum of |15.68, which the auditor finds to be justly due him for that hay and those services.

The authorities are abundant to show, that the defendant stands in precisely the same situation, in respect to his legal liability in the present case, as he would have done had the agreement in relation to the payment for the hay and services in goods been made directly with the defendant himself. The defendant was bound by the acts and agreements of his agent, within the legitimate scope of his agency; that is to say, under the circumstances disclosed in the auditor’s report, he was bound by the acts and agreements of his agent in relation to the occupation, management and control of the store in which he was employed and the sale of goods therefrom. It is wholly immaterial to the defendant’s liability to third parties, on what terms and conditions, as between themselves, the business of the defendant was conducted by his agent. Nor does it make any difference that the defendant’s *160agent appropriated the plaintiff’s hay, as well as the proceeds of the defendant’s judgment against the plaintiff, to his own use. For aught that appears, it may have been understood and agreed between the defendant and his agent, that the entire proceeds of the business, including everything that could be obtained upon the credit of the principal, should enure to the benefit of the agent. Circumstances seem to indicate such to have been the arrangement, as the auditor finds that the defendant permitted his agent, long after he had forbidden him longer to carry on business in his name, to institute and prosecute to final judgment and execution a suit against the plaintiff, in his name, for a portion of those proceeds, and then to appropriate to his own use the avails of that execution. But this could not exonerate the defendant from liability to fulfill the contracts of his agent, made in his behalf in the regular course of his employment as agent, while openly carrying on business in his name and with his authority, and in relation to the sale of the defendant’s goods entrusted to his care for the purpose of being sold. 1 Parsons on Contracts 39; Webster v. Clark, 30 N. H. 245; Story on Agency, secs. 442, 443, 451; Paley’s Agency 343, 345, 593; 2 Kent’s Com., sec. 41; Todd v. Emly, 7 Mees. & Welsh. 427; Kerns v. Piper, 4 Watts 222; Smith on Merc. Law 56-59, 69; 3 Chitty on Com. and Manf. 202-3; Mead v. Hammond, 1 Str. 505; Cary v. Webster, 1 Str. 480.

The question before us is, therefore, to be determined precisely as if the facts were found to be, that the defendant himself, in anticipation of selling goods to the plaintiff, had received of him the hay and the labor, the value of which the plaintiff now seeks to realize, upon his own express agreement that they should afterwards be paid for in goods from his own store; and the plaintiff' having subsequently received the goods in pursuance of that agreement, the defendant had neglected and refused to allow *161the hay and services in payment therefor, but had compelled the plaintiff to pay him the entire value thereof in cash; whereupon the plaintiff had brought this action to recover of the defendant pay for his hay and services. Under these circumstances, every principle of justice and fair dealing would seem to require the defendant, who had violated his own express and voluntary agreement in relation to the compensation to be received for bis own goods, to pay for the articles originally contracted to be received in payment therefor ; thus, as far as possible, placing the plaintiff in the same condition he would have been in had the defendant fulfilled his undertaking, by refunding to him the money he ought never to have been compelled to pay.

Such, too, is the rule of law, as we understand it, both in this State and elsewhere. The former judgment between the parties forms no bar to the plaintiff’s right to recover. The plaintiff’s claim was not filed in offset in the foi’mer action, and it is not necessary to examine into the merits of the judgment in that suit. The plaintiff" is entitled to recover, upon the ground of the sale and delivery of his hay, and the rendition of his services to the defendant. The defendant having failed to allow these items towards payment for his goods, as he had agreed to do, the plaintiff is not only at liberty, but required, it seems to us, in justice to himself and his rights, to treat the contract in relation to the mode of payment for his labor and hay, as rescinded and broken. That contract was executory. The defendant having refused to carry it out, and having taken and enforced his judgment for the entire value of his goods, the plaintiff is thereby released from all obligations under the contract. It would be quite absurd to hold, that, because the plaintiff' once agreed to take goods from the defendant’s store in payment for his hay and labor, and the defendant afterwards let him have goods to a greater amount, but refused to allow the hay *162and labor in part payment therefor, that, therefore, the plaintiff is to utterly lose all compensation for his services and goods. Such a result would give the defendant a premium for violating his own contract, and severely punish the plaintiff for failing to litigate his rights in the former action.

But the doctrine, that money paid upon an executory contract may be reclaimed, and the value of goods sold and delivered and of labor performed under such a contract, may be recovered after the contract has been broken or rescinded by the other party thereto, is now too well settled to need discussion, although, in this State, the early decision of Tilton v. Gordon, 1 N. H. 33, seemed in conflict with it. The subsequent cases of Stevens v. Lyford, 7 N. H. 360, decided in 1834, Little v. Fuller, 7 N. H. 535, decided in 1835, and Snow v. Prescott, 12 N. H. 535, decided in 1842, the facts in all which, as it seems to us, are not distinguishable in principle from those of the present case, fully and unequivocally recognize the doctrine ; and since the publication of the latter decision the rule of law has been regarded as clear, distinct and well established. Pierce v. Duncan, 22 N. H. 18; Allen v. Webb, 24 N. H. 278; Webb v. Stone, 24 N. H. 282; Warren v. Buckminster, 24 N. H. 336.

As, upon the state of facts found by the auditor, the plaintiff wras entitled to judgment on the report of the auditor for the amount found to have been justly due him therein, with interest from the date of that report, the exceptions to the ruling of the court below, directing a judgment for the defendant, must be sustained, and the judgment itself vacated.

Exceptions sustained.