96 Va. 484 | Va. | 1898
delivered the opinion of the court.
The facts to be considered in this case are as follows:
William J. and L. Blair subscribed to certain shares of the National Mutual Building and Loan Association, and obtained upon them a loan of $3,500, and gave a deed of trust upon real estate to secure the amount, to be repaid in monthly instalments. After making numerous payments upon this loan, they sold the property to Davis and Bumberger, who, with the knowledge and consent of the Association, assumed to pay the amount unpaid upon the loan. Bumberger and Davis subsequently sold the property to the appellant, V. L. Day, for the sum of $6,000. Before making this purchase, appellant applied to Edward White, the collecting agent of the Association, to ascertain the balance due upon the loan originally made to the Blairs; and her contention is, that the balance was reported to her by White as $2,384.50, which she assumed to pay the Association, and paid to Bumberger and Davis the sum of $3,615.50. Some question having arisen after the payments were made to Bumberger and Davis as to the amount due the Building Association in order to satisfy its loan, Edward White, as he states, at the request of Mrs. Day, on November 3,1892, addressed a letter to the secretary of the Association in New York, and as a result of the correspondence thus begun, the secretary, on November 12 of that year, wrote to Mrs. Day informing her in detail upon the whole subject as to the sum necessary to be paid in order to satisfy the demands of the Association with respect to the loan secured upon the real estate purchased by her. Mrs. Day continued to pay all dues and assessments to the Association upon the stock originally issued
Appellant claims in this court that there is error in this decree because she purchased the property after being informed by the agent of the Association that the balance due to it was $2,384.50. White was the collecting agent of the Building and Loan Association. His duty was to receive and receipt for premiums and dues payable to the Association by its members in the city of Roanoke. His agency was limited to those subjects, and he had no power to make the statement attributed to him, and the Association is not bound by it, even assuming that he made it. But it is claimed that the Association has accepted the benefit of the transaction into which the appellant was induced to enter by reason of the act of its agent, and is estopped to deny his authority. It is true that the act of an unauthorized agent may be adopted by the principal, .or if,, with knowledge of the facts, the principal accepts the benefit of such act, he will be estopped to deny the- agent’s authority. But ratification rests upon and implies knowledge on the part of the principal, and there is nothing to show that the Association had any knowledge of the alleged act of its agent prior to-the institution of this suit. It knew that appellant had purchased the property upon which the payment of the debt due to it was secured. It knew that premiums and dues had been paid to it by appellant upon that stock; but there is no evidence that it had any knowledge of the representations which its agent is alleged to have made.
We are of opinion that there is no error in the decree complained of, and it is affirmed.
Affirmed.