189 Iowa 547 | Iowa | 1920
. “When a corporation, company, or individual, lias, for the transaction of any business, an office or .agency in any county other than that in Avhicli the principal resides, service may be had on any agent or clerk employed in such office or agency, in all actions. groAviug out of or connected' with the business of that office or agency.”
•. It appears, that the plaintiff, on March 6, 1918, signed an order as purchaser from the Waterloo Gasoline Engine ■Company of .one Model N tractor, at $1/150. This Avas endorsed by “F. M-. Culbertson, salesman,” and a check draAvn by plaintiff for $100, payable, to the company, Aims mailed Avith the order. The tractor was shipped to plaintiff from the company’s factory at Waterloo, and the bill of lading, accompanied Aidtli a sight draft for the balance of the purchase .price, sent to the People’s Savings Bank of Des Moines, and there paid by the purchaser, avIio, obtaining the tractor, took it to his farm. TJp to this time, McClelland had nothing AArhatever to- do AAdth the sale, delivery, or payment of the machine, and these did. not groAV out. of, nor AArere they connected Avitli, the business he Avas conducting at Polk City. McClelland complained that, as all. of Polk County north of Des Moines had been set apart as .territory in Avhicli he had the exclusive sale of. tractors of the company, plaintiff should have purchased of him; but there is no pretense that the deal greAV out of, or. aauis in any manner connected Avith; McClelland’s place of business at Polk City. This conclusion, is not. obviated by the circumstance that
“If I want a wagon, I give an order to' the Deere Com-' pany to' deliver to John Jones a wagon, and sign my name' to it. ' The order first goes to that office, and the workman delivers the wagon to Jones, and reports the Order to the' factory, and the factory bills it to me, and I pay for it. The order I give is an order for a wagon, or whatever I may not have in my stock. The order directs the Deere Company to ship to John Jones, and, when the company ships to John Jones, it charges that wagon to my account, and the Deere Company then bill me in the regular way, and I pay for it. I collect for the Avagon sold to John Jones. I put my money in'the bank to the account of W. S. Denny Company. Q.' Does any money for any goods you sell go to the account of the John Deere Company? A. No, sir, absolutely not.”
Hammer, cashier of the John Deere PIoav Company, testified that he paid the help of said company, and that Denny ivas not on its payroll, and that he had not been one of its employees, but that he had nothing to do Aidth the adjustments of agents’ commissions; that Denny AAras a retailer; and that neither he nor W. S. Denny Company sells or has sold' implements othemvise than as dealers. The order signed by plaintiff as ’ purchaser and Culbertson as salesman ivas addressed to the Waterloo Gasoline Engine Company, and directed that company to ship from Waterloo to Des Moines at once, sight draft for $1,050 attached to bill of lading, one Model N tractor complete. It ivas so shipped, and, upon payment of sight draft .for the balance of the purchase price, delivered to plaintiff. The latter testified that, in a conversation in February of 1918, Denny informed 'him
As pointed out, the declarations of Denny, even if made, are not sufficient to establish agency of himself or of W. S. Denny Company; nor was the letter of the Waterloo Gasoline Engine Company to plaintiff, designating him “the agent for John Deere Plow Company goods.” The evidence other than the written contract between Denny and the John Deere Plow Company does not warrant the inference that the former was other than a dealer in the implements sold by the former within the city of Des Moines, or that their relations were not those of seller and purchaser. Though Denny, by himself or through W. S. Denny Company,, handled the company’s implements, there is no room to say that he did so as agent in any respect. Occupancy of its property cannot be ascribed otherwise than to convenience, and the relation of agency is not to be inferred therefrom.
IV. But the relations of Denny to the John Deei’e Plow Company were covered by a contract, entered into each year, including 1918. This contract was much like that considered in Pugh v. Bothne Co., 178 Iowa 601. The court there ruled that, even though the defendant therein was a dealer and an automobile company seller, this did not pre