102 Kan. 797 | Kan. | 1918
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The plaintiffs brought this lawsuit to compel the defendant, a Reno county farmer, to pay a second time for a farm tractor purchased by defendant from the plaintiffs’ sales agent at Hutchinson.
Whatever may have been the private or confidential business relations between the plaintiffs and the sales agent, the defendant showed by competent evidence, amply sufficient to sustain the verdict and judgment, that 'the plaintiffs had established the sales agent in Hutchinson to sell tractors, and that they had held him out to defendant and to the general public in that community as their agent. Defendant was not apprised of any restriction placed by plaintiffs on the agent’s authority. It would utterly destroy the foundations of all business confidence between dealers and customers to countenance a claim like the one set up in this case.
A quibble is raised that the agent did not sell the tractor to defendant, but traded it to him for some mules. The defendant told the plaintiffs’ agent that if he, the defendant, could sell some mules he would buy the tractor. The agent brought a mule buyer who purchased $450 worth of mules from the defendant. The check for the mules and the defendant’s, check for the balance of the price of the tractor were then delivered to and cashed by plaintiffs’ agent and the defendant received the tractor pursuant thereto.
By rights this case should be disposed of in a per curiam opinion, for no shadow of error appears in the record, nor is anything presented which is worthy of comment.
Affirmed.