12 Me. 418 | Me. | 1835
—■ The jury have found that the plaintiff has paid money to the use of the defendant. It must have been upon the ground that the labor of Morrill, was performed in the defendant’s service, and on his account. There is evidence to sustain this finding; although it is not to be found in the defendant’s letter, addressed to the plaintiff. Lowder, Jr. the general agent of the defendant at the time, authorized the plaintiff to hire Morrill; and unless it was to be on the defendant’s account, there was no necessity for such authority. If the plaintiff was author
It was not then until the plaintiff had actually paid the money, which he was justified in doing by his authority to hire, that any right of action accrued to him against the defendant. Within six years from that time, this action was brought. The case does not therefore require a new promise, which there has been an attempt to prove, the sufficiency of which it is unnecessary to determine, or the authority of the agent, by whom it is alleged to have been made.
Exceptions overruled.