— This is an action to recover compensation for cutting thirty and one-half cords of wood to be used for charcoal, and two and one-half cords to be sold on the market. The defendant denied liability. The cause was submitted to the court as a jury without instructions. There was a judgment for the plaintiffs
The plaintiffs’ evidence tended to prove the following facts: That, in the spring of 1889, they chopped the wood under a contract with one Rinne; that the contract was made with Rinne as the agent of the defendant, and upon the latter’s credit; that the prices for cutting the wood, as specified in the account, were agreed on between them and Rinne, and that the defendant hauled the wood away. To establish the agency of Rinne, or for the purpose of showing a state of facts which would estop the defendant from denying the fact of such agency, the plaintiffs’ proof was in substance that, in the year 1889, the defendant was in charge of a farm in St. Louis county, and was engaged in clearing the land and cutting the timber into cord wood, to be sold on the market and for charcoal purposes; that, in the first part of the year and during the time that the plaintiffs were chopping the wood, Rinne was also engaged in cutting cord wood, and in superintending other persons who were chopping wood on the premises; that Saylor lived in the city, and that he employed Rinne as his agent'or manager of the business conducted on the farm, or that he at least held him out to the public as such agent or manager, and that Saylor saw the plaintiffs cutting the wood and made no objections. But it is earnestly argued that the evidence of Rinne’s agency is insufficient to establish that fact. One or two of the plaintiffs’ witnesses stated in a general way that the defendant visited the farm once or twice in every week, and that, when there, he consulted with Rinne about the business that was being conducted on the farm. One witness said: “I heard Mr. Saylor say to Mr. Rinne: ‘You
The plaintiffs also read the following letter from the defendant to Rinne:
“St. Louis, 5-8, 1889.
“Mr. JElJW. Rinne, Fenton, Mo.
“Deab Sie: — I forgot to mention to you yesterday that I do not wish to dispose of any corn at present. I mentioned to you, when in the city, to dispose of some of it. So do not sell any. Still no rain. Hope it will rain soon, that it will plough better. I found it is - little hard where Robinson was ploughing. Hope you have finished planting the piece of corn, hoping you will get yours in early next week; and please push the other pit of charcoal as fast as possible. "We got home before six o’clock. Yours truly,
“B. E. Saylob.
“P. S. Please have wagon bed fixed for hauling charcoal.”
This letter was written while the plaintiffs were at work.
The law of agency is that the liability of an alleged
The fact that the defendant, in the management of the business connected with the farm, may have acted as the agent of his wife, and that this was known, will not relieve him from personal liability. As the defendant’s wife was, at that time, incapable of being sued, there being no evidence that the farm was her sole and separate property, he must be regarded as the principal, as to all persons contracting with him or his representative at the farm. Blakely v. Bennecke, 59 Mo. 193; Fay v. Richmond, 18 Mo. App. 355.
the .judgment of the circuit court will be affirmed.