48 Pa. Super. 510 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1912
Opinion by
The defendant, an incorporated company, was engaged,
The defendant filed an affidavit of defense admitting all of the facts already stated but asserting that it had no money in its hands belonging to the plaintiff by reason of the following additional facts averred: The plaintiff authorized and directed the defendant in offering the horse for sale to warrant him to be “a gentleman’s road horse, sound and kind in all harness,” and the defendant did so warrant. After the sale had been made, the horse delivered to the purchaser, and the purchase money paid to the defendant, the latter alleges that the purchaser took him away to try him; that upon such trial he turned out to be vicious and unmanageable, breaking the wagon in which he was hitched and hurting the driver thereof; that the'horse was thereupon returned by the purchaser to the defendant and that the latter received it and returned the entire purchase money to the purchaser. The affidavit further avers that when the plaintiff delivered his horse for sale he was well aware of the fact that it was vicious and unmanageable. The learned court below, being of the opinion that these facts set up in the affidavit of defense exhibited no sufficient answer to the plaintiff’s claim, made absolute a rule for judgment. The defendant appeals.
It must be apparent that the relation between the plaintiff and defendant, created when the horse was delivered to the former to be by it sold, was that of principal and
When the horse had been delivered to the purchaser and the purchase money paid to the agent for the owner, the sale was fully completed and the powers of the agent over the property he had sold were exhausted. He had made and executed for his principal the only contract in relation to the horse he was authorized to make. It is true that in executing the contract of sale the agent was authorized to warrant and did warrant the horse to be sound and kind. The warranty so given became binding on the principal and would necessarily subject him to the liability that would follow an established breach of it. But the agent had no authority to agree for his principal with the purchaser that there had been in fact a breach of the warranty, nor to liquidate and pay for his principal the damages that would result in case there had been such breach. When the purchaser, alleging a breach of the warranty, offered to return the horse, he should have been referred to the principal. The agent had no authority to represent his principal in such a transaction and commit him to any particular line of conduct merely because of a claim by the purchaser that there had been a breach of the warranty.
It is not contended by the agent that any other authority was expressly given to it except the direction to sell the horse, with the warranty mentioned, retain its
An examination of these cases leaves but little room to doubt that it was the plain duty of the defendant agent to turn over to his principal the money of the latter in his hands. If a dispute arose or was likely to arise between the purchaser and the owner, it was no part of the duty of the agent to attempt to determine the rights of either party or to bind his principal in a matter clearly outside of the scope of his authority.
Nor is the situation materially affected by the averment that the plaintiff was guilty of deceit in authorizing the warranty that was given. Even if we concede, under the authority of Freyman v. Knecht, 78 Pa. 141, that if the owner warranted the horse to be kind in all harness, knowing at the time he made the warranty the horse was in fact vicious and unmanageable, a purchaser would have the right to return the horse to the owner and rescind the contract, no such right was exercised in this case. For such a purpose the defendant in no way represented the owner, and the purchaser was in no different position than if he had left the horse at any public stable and given notice of that fact to the defendant.
But it is argued that under the circumstances of this case the defendant auctioneer was not obliged to subject himself to an- action at the hands of the purchaser for a breach of the warranty it had made on the strength of the direction from the plaintiff. It is not by any means clear, under the facts of this case, that any such action could
We are of opinion, therefore, that the defendant has exhibited no sufficient answer to the plaintiff’s demand for the purchase money of his horse and that the learned judge below was right in entering judgment for the plaintiff.
Judgment affirmed.