24 Barb. 25 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1857
The action before the justice was brought by the Budlongs against Van Nostrand, to recover damages for the breach of a contract for the delivery by the latter of 500 bushels of oats, at 50 cents per bushel. The cause was tried on the 28th of May, 1855, when the plaintiff recovered judgment for $40.50 damages and $2.41 costs. The county court reversed this judgment, and the plaintiffs appealed to this court. Upon the trial before the justice, Chauncey K. Higley was sworn as a witness for the plaintiffs, and testified that the plaintiffs were partners in business, during the winter and spring previous to the trial, in buying grain at the rail road depot in Mentz. for the Albany and Hew York markets. At that place (Mentz) the witness was acting as agent for them in buying grain. That his business was buying and taking in grain, oats and corn. The witness then gave evidence tending to prove the contract with the defendant, as stated, in which the witness acted as agent for the plaintiffs in making the contract, and that the plaintiffs were not present, and that he disclosed his agency to the defendant at the time and paid him one dollar to bind the bargain; also that the defendant had delivered, under the contract, 319 bushels of oats and no more, for which he had received his pay at the price stipulated. That he then told the witness that he would not deliver any more oats, as they were worth 20 to 25 cents more per bushel to the plaintiffs than the witness had agreed to pay for them. It appeared by the testimony of this witness, that at the time he and
Among the witnesses introduced by the defendant, was one by the name of Charles Howell, who testified that he heard a conversation between the defendant and Higley, on the bridge in Port Byron, “in this month,” (the month of May, 1855.) The defendant then put the following question to him : “ What was that conversation?” to which the plaintiff objected, on the ground that Higley should be first interrogated on that point, if it was the defendant’s object thereby to impeach him. The defendant stated that such was his object,'and also to show Higley’s admissions. The justice sustained the objection and excluded the evidence. The defendant then put a number of questions to the witness Howell, with a view to prove Higley’s
On the question whether the declarations of an agent may be proved as binding upon his principal, the rule is, that such declarations are only admissible when they constitute a part of the res gestee. The principal constitutes the agent his representative in the transaction of certain business; whatever, therefore, the agent does in the lawful prosecution of that business is the act of the principal, whom he represents; and where the acts of the agent will bind the principal, there his representations, declarations and admissions respecting the subject matter will also bind him, if made at the same time, and constituting a part of the res gestee. The admission or declaration of the agent, to bind the principal, must accompany and be in relation to some authorized act of the agent, et dum fervet opus. It is because it is a verbal act that it is admissible at all. (1 Greenl. Ev. §§ 113, 114.) The offer in this case was to prove certain declarations of the witness Higley, made in May. The offer did not include the fact that any thing was being done or attempted at the time the declarations were made. The time for the delivery of the oats had expired, and the rights of the parties were fixed and it does not appear that Higley had authority from the plaintiffs to do any thing further in relation to the transaction, much less to bind them by his admissions. The contract was made between the 5th and 10th of March, and the oats were to be delivered in two weeks, which was afterwards extended a week or ten days. Higley’s agency extended to buying and taking in the oats, and nothing further. There is no point of view in which the defendant was entitled to the evidence, and the justice was right in excluding it.
The respondent’s counsel urges that the contract was void
The judgment of the county court should be reversed, and that of the justice affirmed.
Ordered accordingly.
T. R. Strong, Welles and Smith, Justices.]