153 Mo. 625 | Mo. | 1900
This is a suit to recover of defendant damages for refusing to complete a purchase of land which it is alleged was struck off to him on his bid at a foreclosure sale under a deed of trust. Upon the trial at the close of the plaintiff’s evidence the court instructed the jury that under the evidence the plaintiff was not entitled to recover. Plaintiff took a nonsuit with leave, and after an ineffectual motion to set the same aside, brought this appeal.
The evidence tended to show that in 1892, the then
Plaintiff offered in evidence the following: “I now offer in evidence this memorandum found on page 270 of the sheriff’s sale book, the memorandum made by the sheriff and the one made by the deputy sheriff, so far as can be ascertained. Which memorandum is in words and figures as follows, to wit: ‘Sold to W. H. Hartman for $3,050. Sold to M. C. Shryack and O. TI. Harrison.’ ” Defendant objected to this as evidence, and the court sustained the objection. Up to this time there had been no evidence of the refusal of the trustee to act,
I. If we -assume that the sheriff was the implied agent of the defendant and as such authorized to make the memorandum required by the statute of frauds to bind him, the plaintiff’s case fails because the memorandum attempted to be shown in evidence is itself insufficient. All that we are told of the memorandum is that it was made on the sheriff’s sale book and is in these words: “Sold to W. H. Hartman for $3,050.” It was perhaps intended to'be shown that this memorandum was written on a page in the book in which was the notice of sale containing the names of the parties, and a description of the property, but if the page contains anything of that kind it was not offered in evidence and the record does not show it. In Ringer v. Holtzclaw, 112 Mo. loc. cit. 522, it is said: “All the authorities are agreed that the memorandum must state the contract with reasonable certainty, so that its essential terms can be ascertained from the writing itself without resort to parol evidence.” This" memorandum
The memorandum was: “Sold to W. H. Hartman for $3,050. Sold to M. O. Shyrack and O. H. Harrison.” We can not reconcile the statements of the sheriff - and his deputy by concluding that the sheriff was referring to the Shyrack and Harrison part of the memorandum, because he said he made the memorandum directly after defendant came to his office the second time that afternoon and refused to take the property, which was about two hours after the sale. The sale to Shyrack and Plarrison was nearly a month after. The recognizing of the auctioneer as the agent of both parties in such transactions is one of those judicial encroachments on the terms of the statute of frauds that we inherited with the statute itself from England, and grew out of what the courts considered a necessity; but having gone to the extent of creating an agent for the partysought to be charged, the courts have always required that his act should be proven with reasonable certainty, and this the plaintiff failed to do in this case.
II. But was the sheriff acting in his official capacity here, and was he for this purpose the defendant’s agent? In
In Tatum v. Holliday, 59 Mo. 422, it is held that where a trustee dies and the court appoints the sheriff to foreclose the deed of trust, the sheriff acts in his official capacity; and the court say, arguendo, that he is responsible on his bond for his act. There the trustee had died and the circuit court had
In the case at bar the sheriff was not appointed by the court nor in pursuance of the statute, but by an individual and in pursuance of the terms of a private deed. In such case he is no more acting in his official capacity nor liable as such, than he would be if he were employed to assist in any other private business. Whereas when he is appointed by the court, in the words above quoted, “he acts simply in the execution of a judicial power,” but when he is employed by an individual he is simply a substituted trustee. In the one case he is responsible as sheriff on his bond, in the other he is only liable as an individual. In the one case, if the law were still as it was when Stewart to use v. Garvin, 31 Mo. 36; Tatum v. Holliday, 59 Mo. 422; Springer v. Kleinsorge, 83 Mo. 152, were decided he would have the authority as the implied agent of the bidder to make a memorandum to bind him in the face of the statute of frauds, in the other he would have no such authority.
We hold that in this case the plaintiff was only a substituted trustee acting in his individual and not in his official capacity and had no authority to bind the defendant by any memorandum he may have made.
HI. The doctrine of agency in the auctioneer for both seller and buyer was established when the statute- was such that the authority of an agent to bind his principal in a contract for the sale of land need not have been in writing, but might
IY. There is nothing in the plaintiff’s case that particularly commends it to one’s sense of justice. The fact that at a resale within a month he sold this property for $725 which he wanted to force on the defendant for $3,050 gives this case the aspect of an effort to take a hard advantage.
We think the learned trial judge had the right conception of the case when he instructed for a nonsuit! The judgment is affirmed.