64 So. 559 | Ala. | 1913
In this case the bill of exceptions contains the following: “After some time had been devoted to the settlement of pleadings, and while the pleadings still remain unsettled, the court required the plaintiff and defendant to go to trial on the plaintiff’s complaint and the defendant’s plea of the general issue, Avith leave to give in evidence any matters of defense, special or otherwise, if a good defense to plaintiff’s cause of action, the same as if specially and properly pleaded.”
No exception appears to have been reserved by any of the parties to the above ruling of the court, and we therefore take it that, in this case, the gap, in so far as the pleadings were concerned, was entirely let down by consent of parties; and we will treat the case as if there had been appropriate pleas setting up every defense to which the evidence in the case can be held to be appli
Without regard to the question as to whether the dray was or was not the dray which Garnett ordered, Garnett testified as above stated, and he further testified that from that time until December 2, 1909, he and the
There was evidence tending to show that a load of 2,000 pounds was a full load for the dray under discussion, and that 5,000 pounds was put upon the dray, and that, to use the language of a witness, “it did not stand up.” There was other evidence from which the jury had the right to infer that, while the defendant, Garnett, kept the wagon and used it in his business, it was too light to meet the ordinary requirements of his business.
“The principal is liable for the agent’s acts within the scope of his actual authority, because it is his own act, and is liable for the agent’s act Avithin the scope of the apparent authority, AAddch he holds the agent out as having, but which the agent in fact has not, because to dispute the existence of such apparent authority would enable the principal to commit a fraud on innocent third persons relying on such appearance. — Patterson v. Neal, 135 Ala. 477, 33 South. 39.
It seems clear that, if all the evidence of Garnett is to be believed, the agent, Davis, possessed the apparent —if not the actual — authority to make the agreement which Garnett testifies the agent made Avith him when he called on him after the receipt by Garnett of the above-quoted letter dated December 2, 1909. The agent, according to Garnett’s testimony, called on him “to adjust the matter” pursuant to said letter of December 2, 1909, and, if the agreement Avas made, as testified to by Garnett, that Garnett should keep the dray under the statement by the agent that the dray would hold up 5,000 pounds, and that, if it did not do so, then that Garnett would not have to pay for it, that agreement
It seems therefore that, under the evidence in this case as we find it set out in the bill of exceptions, the trial court committed a reversible error in charging the jury, at the plaintiff’s request, that, if they believed the evidence, the plaintiff was entitled to recover of the defendant the sum of $92.50.
Reversed and remanded.