6 S.E. 571 | N.C. | 1888
(251) "1. On 25 January, 1886, Joshua L. Whedbee executed to the plaintiffs the mortgage hereto attached and marked `A,' which was duly registered in the proper county at once.
"2. Both plaintiffs and defendants were nonresidents of North Carolina, and were commission merchants and cotton factors in Norfolk, Va.
"3. About the beginning of the fall of 1886 one T. Clayton Whedbee went to defendants' office in Norfolk and said to them, `I think I can make some money buying cotton in North Carolina if I can get it sold on reasonable terms,' and asked the defendants to name their best terms for selling. The defendants answered that they would sell for him any cotton he might ship them for $1 per bale commissions, to the best advantage, and would honor Whedbee's drafts on them to the extent of such sales. Whedbee returned home, and later in the year shipped to the defendants, for sale on his own account, over one hundred bales, which they sold for him on the terms named, placed the proceeds to his credit as sold, and honored his drafts for it or sent to him by express as he directed. No other relations existed between T. Clayton Whedbee and the defendants.
"4. Among the cotton thus shipped to defendants by T. Clayton Whedbee were two bales which he bought of Joshua L. Whedbee, and which had been raised by the latter on the `Crow Point' farm described in the mortgage referred to in section one hereof, and which netted when sold ______, $ _______, the proceeds of which went to T. Clayton Whedbee's credit as aforesaid, and were paid upon his draft or sent to him by express.
"5. The said two bales were in no way distinguished from the other cotton shipped defendants by T. Clayton Whedbee. The defendants had no knowledge of where they were raised, nor had they any (252) actual notice that the plaintiffs held a claim or mortgage against Joshua L. Whedbee and no constructive notice of the same, unless *211 the facts herein stated amount to constructive notice of the same. T. Clayton Whedbee did have actual notice of said claim and mortgage, and knew also that the said cotton was raised on said farm.
"6. The defendants had no such notice, nor was any demand made on them for the said cotton or its proceeds till after they had settled in full with T. Clayton Whedbee.
"7. That Joshua L. Whedbee was in possession of the `Crow Point' farm, and was authorized and directed to prepare and house the crops thereon for market; that he was insolvent and without means, and could raise money only for that purpose by selling the crops, or part of them, and the proceeds received by him from the sale of the two bales of cotton were actually used in housing the crops on said farm, which were shipped to the plaintiffs."
The mortgage referred to as marked "A" was not sent up with the transcript, but it was admitted on the argument in this Court that J. L. Whedbee, on 25 January, 1886, executed to the plaintiffs a certain mortgage, which was duly proved and registered, by which he "conveyed to the plaintiffs his crops of every kind to be grown by him during the year 1886 upon a certain farm in said county known as the `Crow Point' farm," to secure the debt named in said mortgage.
Upon the case agreed his Honor gave judgment for the defendants, and the plaintiffs appealed. Whether the sale of cotton (253) made by a factor or agent or commission merchant in the State of Virginia, for his principal in this State, who shipped it to him for sale in the regular course of business, such factor or commission merchant selling it, without any notice or knowledge of any claim by another, and paying over the proceeds to his principal without such knowledge or notice, is such a conversion by him as will make him liable to the actual owner for the proceeds of the cotton so sold and paid over to his principal, it is not necessary for us to decide in this action.
The case states that J. L. Whedbee was authorized and directed to prepare and house the crops for market, and that the proceeds of the cotton in question were so used by him, and that he had no other means for that purpose. But counsel for the plaintiffs say "the case does not state who gave this authority or direction." The clear and only reasonable inference is that, as it existed, it was given by some one who had the power to give it, and this, we assume, could only have come from the plaintiffs. *212
Having then the authority from the plaintiffs to house and prepare the crops for market, he had the implied authority from them to use the necessary and proper means to that end. The proceeds of the cotton were used by him as the means and, as the case shows, the only means which he possessed for that purpose. The plaintiffs thus, by and through an agent authorized by them, received the benefit of the proceeds of the cotton, and to allow them to take the benefit of his act and to repudiate so much of it as was against them, though necessary and proper in the execution of the authority given, would be to reverse the ordinary rules of fair dealing and make fraud easy and profitable.
Whedbee had the authority from the plaintiffs to house and prepare the corps for market, and this carried with it the implied authority to use the means necessary for that purpose, and in this respect (254) the plaintiffs were bound by his acts. Huntley v. Mathias,
No error. Affirmed.
Cited: R. R. v. Simpkins,