96 N.Y.S. 714 | N.Y. App. Term. | 1905
The plaintiff sues to recover the value of a quantity of office stationery alleged to have been purchased by defendant. The stationery was ordered by one Watts, and received and used by him, and the question involved is whether Watts acted as defendant’s agent, and was authorized so to act, in buying the goods sued for. Watts had established relations with certain persons abroad who were to consign goods to him for sale in this city. He made an arrangement with defendant by which the latter agreed for a stated commission on sales to furnish Watts with a place in which to do business, and to pass upon credits, guaranty sales, and make collections, all other expenses, outside of the actual preservation of the goods, to be borne by Watts, who was to retain all the profit made out of the business beyond the percentage to be paid to defendant. Watts ordered from plaintiff the goods now sued for, representing to him that they were for defendant, and that he (Watts) had authority from defendant to order them. Plaintiff acted in reliance upon these statements. He made no effort to corroborate them and had no knowledge of the relation between Watts and defendant, except what Watts told him. Watts testified that he told defendant that he would need certain books and stationery to carry on the business, and
In charging the jury, the learned justice instructed them in effect that they should find for plaintiff if they found that Watts was authorized to contract the bill, or if defendant so held Watts out as his agent as to justify the plaintiff in assuming that Watts was so authorized, and, as bearing upon this holding out of Watts as agent, the attention of the jury was especially and repeatedly called to the signs and letter heads above referred to, of which, as has been said, the plaintiff had no knowledge when he extended the credit. These instructions were duly excepted to, and in our opinion constitute reversible error. Undoubtedly persons may, in certain cases, be held liable as principals for the acts, of their assumed agents, because they have by their actions imparted to those agents an apparent authority to represent them. This rule when applied rests upon the doctrine of estoppel, but it can have no application in a case like the present, wherein the person dealing with the assumed agent had no knowledge, at the time of so dealing, of the acts of the principal which, if known, might have justified the belief that the agent acted by authority. Ludowieg v. Talcott, 47 Misc. Rep. 77, 93 N. Y. Supp. 621. If plaintiff, when he accepted Watts’ order for stationery, knew nothing of the actual or apparent relation between Watts and the defendant, except what Watts told him, and had never seen or known of the signs upon the building or the letter heads used in the business, he could not have relied upon those signs and letter heads as the basis of a belief that Watts was Talcott’s agent authorized to order goods in his name. It was therefore misleading to instruct the jury that they were entitled to consider whether defendant by the use of the signs and letter heads had so held out Watts as his agent as to justify^ the assumption by plaintiff that Watts was authorized to order goods on defendant’s account and credit. We think also that the court should have distinctly charged the jury, as requested by defendant, that when third parties deal with an agent they are put upon their guard and do so at their risk.
Judgment reversed, and new trial granted, with costs to appellant to abide .the event. All concur.