22 Mo. 397 | Mo. | 1856
delivered the opinion of the court.
If Samuel Dellinger borrowed the money as the agent of his brother Frederick, and afterwards, to secure its repayment, gave his own note, with the plaintiff, as his security, who subsequently paid the money, it was the duty of the defendant to refund it to the plaintiff, and the law will imply a promise between these parties to that effect; and if this were so, it is quite immaterial in this case that the agent did not divulge his agency, or the name of his principal, or that the money was loaned originally by Young, and the contract of suretiship subsequently entered into by Higgins, upon the individual credit of Samuel Dellinger. If, however, Samuel Dellinger borrowed the money for himself, either to pay a debt he owed his brother, or to make a loan to him, then Frederick was not liable to the plaintiff, but to his brother’s estate. This, we think,.is the law of the case, and substantially the instruction the court gave the jury, and there is no ground for disturbing the judgment.
In Story on Agency, § 270, it is said: “If the agent contracts in such form as to render himself personally responsible, he can not afterwards, whether his principal be or be not known at the time of the contract, relieve himself of that responsibility. Rut, although the agent may thus bind himself personally, yet this by no means shows that the principal may not also be bound as a party to the contract through his agent; for there is no doubt that parol evidence is admissible in behalf of one of the contracting parties to show that the other was an agent only in the sale, although contracting in his own name, so as to fix the real principal.” In Hopkins v. Lacouture, (4
It is said to be impossible to reconcile the American cases upon the question of the liability of the principal, when the obligation is executed in the name of the agent only ; and if the instrument here given, to secure the repayment of the money,
It is insisted, however, that there was no evidence of agency to warrant the instructions the court gave, or to justify the finding of the jury ; but we think otherwise. The money was forwarded to the defendant as soon as it was borrowed: he received it, and used it; and when afterwards informed that his name was on the note for its repayment, and he was called upon as the real debtor to pay, so far from denying his liability, he expressed his regret at his inability to meet it. These letters, however, it seems, were in answer to one in which it was falsely suggested that Tie had signed the note; but certainly this does not diminish the force of the implied admission, so clearly made in them, that the money was borrowed for his use, and that he was the party who ought to repay it. He might forget whether he had signed the note given for money his brother had borrowed for him; but we can hardly suppose that, upon the false suggestion of this letter, he could be led into the belief that the money for which the note was given was borrowed for him, and ought to be repaid by him, if the fact were altogether otherwise. Indeed, these letters show, we think, quite satisfactorily, that Samuel Dellinger borrowed the money, not to pay any debt due from him to his brother, but as his brother’s agent, in anticipation however, and under the expectation entertained by both, that it would be refunded out of
the judgment is affirmed.