60 Mo. App. 255 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1895
Lead Opinion
In vain has been our search through the record of the case now before us to ascertain wherein, if at all, it is to be distinguished in its essential features from that reported in 54 Mo. App. 327.
When the case was here on the former appeal the judgment was reversed and the cause remanded to be proceeded with in accordance with the view of the law expressed in the majority opinion. Since then the case has been retried, and the court in its instructions
The contention of the counsel for defendant is, therefore, that there could be no ratification of the unauthorized act of Hershe as agent of the defendant in consequence of the acceptance by defendant of the fruits of Hershe’s unauthorized acts. The defendant objects that the ratification of the unauthorized act of Hershe in making the note and procuring the draft therefor, to be effective, must have come to the knowledge of the defendant before or at the time of the receipt of the money on the draft. This objection, we think, was fully met and answered by what was said in the majority opinion when the case was here before. There is nothing suggested in the very elaborate brief of the industrious counsel for the defendant that in
In the dissenting opinion by Mr. Justice Ellison, it was said: “The money which is here sued for was not paid or turned in to defendant as defendant’s money or as money which had arisen on any of the defendant’s transactions. It was paid by the agent and received by defendant as the agent’s money in discharge of his debt.” If the evidence contaihed in the record in the former appeal tended to show the state of facts set out in the paragraph just quoted, that in the present record shows just the contrary. This will be seen by reference to the testimony of Mr. Toll, president of the defendant, in response to the following questions propounded to him by plaintiff:
“Q. I will ask you how you kept your account with your Trenton office? A. We kept our account with our Trenton office in our daily balance after we transcribed it in a book at Kansas City.
“Q. Who did you charge it to, your frentón office? A. Yes, sir; to the Trenton office.
“Q. The Trenton Yard, I mean; and you had your debit and credit all through to the Trenton yard? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. From beginning to end? A. Yes, sir.”
In addition to this, the whole testimony of the-defendant’s officers show that they thought thé draft represented the proceeds of the sale of. defendant’s own lumber. The transaction of Hershe with the-
The ease, as already remarked, has been tried in conformity to the directions approved by us when the case was here before, and since no new fact has been introduced into the present case, as appears from the record, we are, if for no other reason, bound under the principle of stare decisis to adhere to our ruling in the former appeal. Hombs v. Corbin, 34 Mo. App. 393.
It follows 'the judgment must be affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting). — I adhere to the opinion expressed when the case was here before. All pretense that the agent was authorized to borrow for defendant the sum sued for, or to execute a note in defendant’s name is abandoned. The suit was originally on the note which the agent executed in defendant’s name, but an amended petition was filed in which that, was abandoned. The sole question is ratification. And as to this it seems now to be conceded that, since defendant had no knowledge at time it received the draft that the agent had gotten it of plaintiff in defendant’s name,
“Office of Badger Lumber Company, Trenton, Mo., July 21, 1891.
“Badger Lumber Company, A. A. White Treas. Kansas City, Mo.
“Dear Sir: Please find enclosed draft No. 11,106 on Nat. Bank, of Com., K. C., Mo., Amount. . . . $500 00 u u u _ a ^ ^ u ^ a _
“Total, $500 00
*263 “Please place same to our credit and acknowledge receipt. Yours very truly,
“Benj. E. Hebshe, Agent.”
The amount was credited by defendant on the account as directed. I am not able to see how the extract from the testimony of one of defendant’s officers, •as set out in the opinion, should in any way change the material facts, or the result that should follow therefrom. It can certainly make no difference how defendant kept its accounts and books with the Trenton yard — whether the charges were against the Trenton yard or against the agent who controlled, managed and handled the funds arising from that yard. The defendant was not;dealing with an inanimate affair, but was, of course,' dealing with its agent who sold lumber for it and collected the purchase money, out of which he bought native lumber, paid expenses, deposited the money and was to remit balances to defendant. And when he remitted to defendant he was, of course, discharging what he owed it. Whenever there was a balance against him or the Trenton office (no difference which) representing an amount which he had misapplied, he owed that amount — that amount was due from him to defendant. And when he sent the draft to defendant he did so in payment of a part of what was due from him, as the result of misapplication of moneys in his hands. Suppose that, instead of giving Hershe the draft, plaintiff had given him that amount of money and he had paid it over to defendant, would it be in accordance with any principle of law to say that defendant, upon learning that he had obtained it by the fraudulent use of their name, should be held to pay that sum to plaintiff? If this was the law, then every one who is defrauded by an agent forging his principal’s name for the purpose of obtaining money to meet his speculations from his principal, can recover
It seems to me that the doctrine of ratification by retaining the fruits of an unauthorized contract finds no facts in this case upon which to rest. The opinion of my colleagues treats the case as though an agent had without authority bought a horse of a third party and executed a note for the purchase money in his principal’s name. In such case, when the principal learns how the horse was obtained, he could not refuse to pay the note and yet retain the horse. If he refused to surrender the horse he would be compelled to pay the note. Otherwise he would have the horse without having rendered value. This is in no way similar to the facts of the case before us for the defendant here in receiving the money was only receiving what was due to it. It was not receiving something without rendering value, for it had already parted with what the money received represented and gave the agent’s account credit. And the sum which defendant received was not the fruits (in a legal sense) of the fraudulent act of Hershe, but the fruits of its business at Trenton, represented by its agent.
The error which it seems to me is made in the decision of 'this case is also made apparent by the authorities cited in support of ■ the opinions rendered now and when the case was first here. Ruggles v. Washington County, 3 Mo. 496, was where agents of
But, whenever the unauthorized agent owes the principal the money which he pays to him and the principal, without knowledge of how it was obtained, applies it to the agent’s account, the principal does not ratify the means whereby it may have been obtained by refusing to pay over the money to the party from whom it was obtained. In such case there is no privity between the principal and the party with whom the agent dealt. There is no ratification, for the reason that the principal refuses to recognise the unauthorised act and his retaining the money is not as being received on a contract with the third party, but upon an independent legal cause, vis: the pecuniary obligation which the agent owed to him.
The distinction which I have been endeavoring to make has been made in several adjudications: Thatcher v. Pray, 113 Mass. 291; Baldwin v. Burrows, 47 N. Y. 212; Bohart v. Oberne, 36 Kan. 284; The Penn. Co. v. Dundridge, 8 Gill & J. 323; Gulick v. Grover, 33 N. J. L. 463; Lime Rock Bk. v. Plimpton, 17 Pick. 159.
The first of these cases is much in point here. There an agent of the plaintiff sold to the defendant Pray, a horse without having any authority to do so. The agent received a draft from defendant in payment and sent it to plaintiff, who received the same without knowing of the agent’s unauthorized act in selling the horse, and applied it as a credit on what the agent was owing him on other matters. Afterwards, on learning of the sale he disavowed it and demanded the horse of defendant. The defendant demanded the money he had paid to the agent, and which the plaintiff had