8 Ga. App. 442 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1910
Armour & Co. brought a suit against R. K. Hopkins & Co. on an account for larch Hopkins & Co. by a plea attempted to set off the difference in price between certain lard they claimed to have purchased from Armour & Co., but which was not delivered, and lard they were compelled to purchase at a higher price to replace that Avhich Armour & Co. had contracted to furnish them, having tendered the difference and making a continuous tender thereof. The testimony for the plaintiff was to the effect that the salesman had no authority to do more than to take orders which were thereafter to be accepted or declined by Armour & Co. It appears that the' defendant did not dispute the correctness of the account upon which the suit was based. At a previous time Hopkins & Co. had given an order to a salesman of the plaintiff, a Mr. Snow, for five tierces - (1800 pounds) of lard' compound at the price of .7% cents per pound. Snow’s taking the order prevented Hopkins & Co. from purchasing it from another salesman, who was trying at the same time to sell to them. Armour & Go. failed to ship the 1800 pounds of lard as purchased by Hopkins, and he was compelled to buy at 10^4 cents per pound, and claimed that Armour & Co. owed him the difference, $43.75. In opposition to this claim of the defendant, the plaintiff, as already stated, set up that the salesman was without authority to make the sale. The defendant R. K. Hopkins testified as to a number of purchases from the plaintiff, and that he did not buy, either the previous goods or those which are the subject-matter of the present suit, subject to confirmation; that it was not the custom to give orders to the salesman and have them confirmed by the house; that they were never confirmed by the house; that he had never had any notice that orders of plaintiff’s salesman had to be confirmed. It is apparent, from this brief summary of the evidence, that there was sharp conflict in the testimony upon the point of the agent’s authority, the plaintiff contending that Mr. Snow was only a special agent, while the contention of Hopkins & Co. was that he was an agent with general authority to sell. The court directed a verdict ih favor of the plaintiff. We think this was error, because the question of fact involved and relating to the powers of the agent should have been submitted to the jury.
Judgment reversed.