135 A. 702 | Vt. | 1927
In this action of contract, the plaintiff seeks to recover damages on account of the defendant's failure to deliver to him an eight-foot broadcast seeder pursuant to the contract hereinafter referred to. Trial below was in the Montpelier city court, where the plaintiff had judgment on a verdict in his favor. The defendant brings the case here on exceptions.
On or about the 28th day of June, 1921, P.J. Hill, D.G.S. Bushnell, and John C. Hood went to the plaintiff's farm in Plainfield, and proposed to sell him any farm machinery he might require. He finally made an arrangement with them to exchange a drill seeder which he then owned for an eight-foot broadcast seeder, the same to be delivered to him the following spring, when he was to pay ten dollars in cash. By direction of Hill, the plaintiff delivered his drill seeder to Hood, but has never paid the ten dollars, and has never received the broadcaster. He seeks to hold the defendant on the ground that Hood, Hill, and Bushnell were its agents in the transaction, duly authorized to make the exchange in its behalf. The defendant denies their agency and authority, and that of each of them, and insists that there is no evidence in the transcript, which is before us, warranting a submission of the question of agency to the jury, and one of the exceptions here relied upon was saved to the overruling of its motion for a verdict.
So far as Hood's relation to the defendant is concerned, the evidence stood in this way: He was engaged in the business of selling the defendant's goods at East Barre. He was improved as a witness for the plaintiff, and when, in direct examination, he was asked if, at the time in question, he was the agent of the defendant, he replied, "I was, a dealer, that's what they call it." It is obvious that the true meaning of this answer depends largely on the way it is punctuated. Omit one comma, and it would be, "I was a dealer, that's what they call it." But the transcript gives the answer as first above written, and we accept it in that way. Standing alone, uncontradicted and unexplained, this answer would, in the circumstances, tend to show that the relation of principal and agent existed between Hood and the defendant. But it later appeared that that relation *165
was evidenced by a written contract between them. The defendant offered to show just what that contract was, but the evidence was rejected and the defendant excepted. This was prejudicial error. The evidence would have shown that Hood was a so-called sales agent, only; that is to say, he bought and sold the defendant's goods on his own account and not otherwise; which, as was held inPiper v. Oakland Motor Co.,
It was conceded that Hill and Bushnell were there in the defendant's employ; but their authority to make this contract or any other contract of like character for and on behalf of the defendant is denied. Subject to the defendant's objection and exception, the plaintiff was allowed to testify that Hill said that they were selling farm machinery for the defendant. Nothing in the law is better settled than that agency cannot be proved by the mere declarations of the alleged agent made out of court.Sias v. Consolidated Lighting Company,
That the burden of proving the agency was on the plaintiff is undeniable. Citizens Savings Bank v. Jenkins,
When the appointment is by parol, the agent is a competent witness to prove the agency and its scope, of course. State v.Kelly,
The plaintiff testified that he did not contract with Hood, and both he and Hood testified that Hill did most of the talking. On the whole, it would be a fair inference that Hill negotiated the exchange and had authority from the defendant to do so. Bushnell produced a blank form and made out the order for the broadcaster. This blank was prepared and furnished Bushnell by the defendant, which fact differentiates the case from Dickerman v. QuincyMutual Fire Ins. Co.,
But the plaintiff argues that the defendant saved no exception to the exclusion of its offer. The transcript shows that counsel for the defendant, in making his offer, fully and clearly set forth the grounds thereof, and invoked the rule above referred to. It was made plain to the court. The transcript then rules in this way: Court — "The third paragraph is excluded." Mr. Gordon — "Exception." We held in Sheldon v. Wright,
The defendant retained the order received from Bushnell and now holds it. Until this controversy arose, it made no protest and gave no sign indicating that it rejected the offer or denied the authority of Bushnell to take it. The order was subject to approval, and if the defendant was the real party it was subject to its approval. The court charged the jury that the fact that the defendant kept the order without approving it or notifying the plaintiff of its disapproval would amount to an acceptance. *169
True it is that it takes two to make a bargain, and that silence gives consent in these cases only when there is a duty to speak. Gould v. Gates Chair Co.,
Reversed and remanded.