3 Ga. App. 212 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1907
(After stating the foregoing facts).
1. The first assignment of error is that the manager of the-plaintiff company was allowed to testify that Huggins on January 1, 1906; “refused to let m’e have more than a thousand pounds-of meal.” The objection which the defendant urges to this testimony is that it does not appear that Huggins was an agent of the company who was authorized to act; and therefore any refusal on his part would not be binding on the defendant. From the-evidence in the record it appears, that Huggins was referred to. by the manager of the defendant company as his bookkeeper; that when plaintiff’s manager called at the office on January 1, Huggins was in charge of the business; also that he had authority to sign orders for the delivery of meal; that he was authorized to-collect all money unless directed not to do so; that both before and after the day named, the plaintiff’s drayman called at the office of the defendant company, and Huggins ordered meal and hulls delivered to him; that when the manager Meakin was absent, Huggins was in charge of the office, because Meakin himself testified. “When I was away from there, I left Mr. Huggins there; his instructions and duties were to issue tickets from the-office, make all charges, and keep a correct record of everything-that transpired in and out of the office in the way of business.” In determining the extent of an agent’s authority, it is more important to look to the nature of the duties he is accustomed to perform than to the name by which he is called. If his duties are those of a manager or an assistant manager, it is immaterial that he is referred to by his principal as a bookkeeper. By a course of dealing Huggins had been held out as having authority1 to deliver and to refuse to deliver meal and to receive payment therefor; he was thereby clothed with apparent authority, to that extent. In Huffcut on Agency (2d ed.) 129, it is said: “The-
2. The defendant contends, that the court erred in admitting in evidence the letter dated March 10, 1906, from the plaintiff to the defendant, on the ground that under the evidence of both parties, the contract was broken, if at all, on January 1, 1906, and the rights of the parties became fixed as of that date; that if Huggins was authorized to act, his refusal to deliver the meal demanded was a breach by the defendant, and that if Huggins Avas not authorized to act, the plaintiff was guilty of a breach in not making a legal demand and tender within the time prescribed
3, 4. The defendant sets forth several excerpts from the charge •of the court and complains that they embody expressions of opinion on the facts. When these excerpts are read in connection with
5. Several assignments of error go to the refusal of the judge to charge in accordance with certain requests submitted in writing by the defendant’s counsel. One of these requests was as follows: “Under the law, persons dealing with one who purports to act in behalf of a corporation do so at their own risk as to whether such person is in fact the agent of the corporation and authorized to act for it, or not.” The court gave this charge but qualified it as follows: “with this proviso, that they are protected if the agent is held out by the company, or other person, as being the agent empowered to transact such business.” It is insisted that the qualification added by the judge was error. Instead of this qualification being error, it kept the charge from being error, because, under the evidence, Huggins had the apparent authority which he assumed - to have; and one of the very acts which clothed him with this apparent authority was the holding of him out by the defendant in such a manner as to lead the plaintiff to believe that he had such authority. The request embodied a correct statement, in the abstract, of a general principle of law, but it would have been error to give in charge this-abstract principle without the. qualification added by the judge. The proviso qualified the abstract principle so as to make it applicable to the evidence in the case.
The defendant further complains of the refusal of the judge to* charge in accordance with a written request, as to certain admissions which had been made in the original answer, but which were subsequently withdrawn by an amendment. The request was substantially a correct statement of the law,- but the language used would probably have misled the jury. The judge refused to-make the charge requested, but in his general charge he covered the law relating to the matter referred to as follows: “Now,, with reference to admissions, I charge you this: If a party make an admission against his own interest, .then, if it is made in the-
6. The demurrer to the petition was properly overruled. No-reversible error appears in any of the grounds of' certiorari.
Judgment affirmed.