130 S.W. 729 | Tex. App. | 1910
This suit was originally brought by appellee, an incorporated mercantile company, in Justice's Court, to recover $120 claimed to be due as commissions on the sale of certain machinery. Judgment was rendered for appellant, but on appeal to the County Court, appellee obtained judgment for the amount sued for with interest.
Appellant has assigned a number of errors, but the view which we take of the evidence renders it necessary for us to pass on only one of said assignments. The undisputed evidence shows that the appellee had nothing to do with making the sale, and if it is entitled to recover at all, it must be upon the ground of exclusive agency. The sale was made by a traveling salesman of appellant to a party in the trade territory of the town of Lott. In December, 1905, by an instrument in writing, the appellant appointed the appellee its agent for the year 1906, to sell its machinery at Rosebud where appellee was transacting business, and also at Lott, where appellee had a branch house. Said instrument authorized appellee to sell the machinery of appellant in the trade territory of Rosebud and of Lott, setting out in detail the manner in which said business should be conducted, and agreeing to pay commissions on all sales made in accordance therewith "within the proper territory, by orthrough the agency of the said agent and not otherwise." There is certainly no direct statement in this instrument that the appellee should have the exclusive right to sell said machinery in said territory. To sustain his theory that this was a contract for exclusive agency appellee relies upon a clause in the contract which bound appellee "not to interfere with or attempt to control the trade *483
of persons seeking to purchase through or negotiate with any other agency." This clearly limits the territory in which the agent is authorized to make sales, but it does not give him exclusive control of said territory. We may reasonably presume that like contracts were made with all other agents appointed by the appellant; and, such being the case, appellee might have safely counted upon its territory not being invaded by other agents appointed by appellant; for it would not be probable that any other agent would invade such territory if he knew that he would get no commission on sales made therein. But suppose some other agent, operating under a like contract, had invaded appellee's territory and made a sale of appellant's machinery, would such sale have been void for want of authority? Not if the appellant saw fit to ratify said sale. The other agent would simply have lost his commission. One clause of the contract is as follows: "No commission shall be earned or paid upon any sale made or trade sought in any territory represented by another agency of the company, and acceptance of any such sale shall not be held a waiver of this condition." This clearly would have deprived the agent who invaded appellee's territory, under a similar contract, from claiming commissions on such sale; but would the acceptance of such sale by appellant have entitled the appellee to commission thereon? The contract nowhere says so. On the contrary, the clause of the contract first above quoted expressly provides that the appellee shall be entitled to commissions on sales in his territory made "by or through the agency of said agent andnot otherwise." It was brought out in the testimony of this case that the traveling salesman of appellant, at the time he sold the machinery to the purchaser, attempted to appoint such party an agent of appellant at the town of Lott, but the State agent refused to ratify said appointment, for the reason that Lott was in the trade territory for which appellee had been appointed agent; and, in this connection, and as his reason for refusing to make such appointment, said State agent testified: "I did not approve and accept such agency contract, as we do not have but one local agent in a town, and we regard our contracts as exclusive contracts of agency." In construing a written contract we must look to the instrument itself. It is true that where a contract is, to any extent, ambiguous, and the parties to such contract have given it a practical construction, such construction will control its interpretation. Galveston, H. S. A. Ry. Co. v. Johnson,
The employment of an agent does not, in the absence of an agreement to that effect, preclude the principal from making the sale; and if the contract should expressly provide that the principal would not appoint any other agent to sell a specific article, or to sell in a specified territory, still, if the contract did not give the agent the exclusive right to sell such article, or to sell in said territory, such agent would not be entitled to commission upon a sale made by the principal without the assistance of the agent. Dole v. Sherwood,
The facts of this case have been fully developed, the nature of appellee's agency appearing from the written instrument creating such agency, which it is the duty of the court to construe; and it clearly appearing therefrom that appellee was not entitled to commissions in the trade territory for which it was appointed agent, except upon sales made by or through its agency, and the undisputed evidence being that appellee had nothing to do with making the sale, we deem it unnecessary to remand this case for another trial. Wherefore we reverse the judgment of the trial court and render judgment for appellant.
Reversed and remanded.