31 Del. 546 | Del. | 1922
after making the above statement of the case, delivering the opinion of the Court:
The important question in the case is this:
Was the plaintiff, at the time the sales were made on which he is seeking to recover commissions, a subagent of the defendant? It is not claimed that there was any express agreement between the plaintiff and defendant that the former should at any time act as agent for the latter, but it is claimed that the relations between the plaintiff and defendant’s agents, Jackson & Co., the course and
It does appear from the evidence, that prior to the sales on which the plaintiff is claiming commissions, which were made by the defendant to the Du Pont Co. direct, the plaintiff rendered services for defendant’s agents, Jackson & Co., that were beneficial to the defendant. But there is nothing to show that the defendant had any knowledge of such services, or knew that the plaintiff was assisting in making' sales for their agent, except that on one occasion a representative of the defendant, and their agent Jackson, went to Wilmington and attempted to make a sale to the Du Pont Co. At the time they called on the plaintiff’s Secretary who effected the sale after they had failed. It is true the Secretary testified that he had collaborated with Mr. Taylor, the managing partner of the defendant, on several occasions in making contracts with the Du Pont Co., but he could recall only the one we have mentioned, and our conclusion is that that is the only evidence that tends to show that the defendant had any knowledge that the plaintiff was assisting in effecting sales in which they were interested.
Aside from that one circumstance the claim of the plaintiff that he was a subagent of the defendant is based entirely on assumptions or inferences which he thinks the Court are justified in making or drawing from the relations between the plaintiff and Jackson & Co., and the nature of the business in which they were engaged.
In the contracts the plaintiff made with Jackson & Co., the defendant’s agents, such agents were described as representing the defendant, and in the contracts made with the Du Pont Co. the plaintiff described himself as representing the Michigan Alakli Company for which the defendants were sole agents. The inference the plaintiff seeks to draw from such language, is that the defendant must have seen the contracts made with their agent and therefore, had knowledge that he was acting for thém and they acquiesced therein. The inference sought to be drawn from
In respect to such contentions it may be said they are more in the nature of assumption than legitimate inference from the evidence. It does not appear that such contracts, or any of them, were ever seen by the defendant. And even if they were, the defendant might reasonably have thought that the plaintiff was employed by, and acting solely, for Jackson & Co., their agents.
We think there is no evidence which shows that the defendant knew that the plaintiff was acting for them, because the one case in which a representative of the defendant was present when the plaintiff assisted in making a sale is not sufficient to impute knowledge to the defendant that the plaintiff was.acting for them. He was acting for their agent, Jackson & Co., but it does not follow that he was acting as defendant’s agent.
The plaintiff concedes that under the general rule of law an agency must arise either by the personal act of the principal or by his express or implied assent to the appointment of an agent by someone else, but he contends—
“That notwithstanding the general rule there are many cases wherein, from the very nature of the duty, or the circumstances under which it is performed, the employment of subagents is imperatively necessary, and the principal’s interests will suffer if they are not so employed. In such cases, although the general rule might otherwise apply, an exception is suggested, based upon the presumed assent of the principal, and therefore if he has not manifested a contrary intent, the employment of the necessary subagents will be implied. The authority of the agent is always construed to include the necessary and usual means to execute it properly.” Mechem on Agency, § 316.
And so the plaintiff, relying on this exception to the general rule, claims that even though the defendants had no knowledge of the services the plaintiff rendered for them through their agents said agents had nevertheless the right, on account of the nature of defendant’s business, to employ, and did employ, the plaintiff, as a subagent of the defendants.
h There is no real controversy between counsel respecting the law applicable to the question of agency except in regard to the employment by an admitted agent of a subagent for the principal.
There is no doubt that the appointment of an agent may in some cases be inferred from the circumstances and conduct of the parties, and the fact of agency may be established either by direct or indirect evidence. It may be implied or inferred, or indirectly shown, by evidence of the relative situation of the parties, the nature of the business which is the subject of controversy, and the character of the intercouse between them, provided the facts and circumstances disclosed by the evidence fairly justify such an inference. Evidence of agency is often found in the fact that the alleged principal has acquiesced in, recognized, or adopted similar acts done on other occasions by the assumed agent. Where the acts so adopted are so closely connected as to constitute a course of dealing or to establish a custom, there can usually be but little difficulty. An agency may arise by implication from acts done by the assumed agent with the consent or acquiescence of the principal. Geylin v. DeVilleroi, 2 Houst. 311; Mechem on Agency, §§ 211, 262, 263, 271; Gambrill v. Brown Hotel Co., 11 Colo. App. 529, 54 Pac. 1025.
As already said, counsel do not seriously disagree about the law of agency; the real dispute is as to the application of admitted law to the facts of this case. The general principles referred to are based on the assumption that the principal knew, or should have known that the assumed agent was acting for him, and that he acquiesced in, recognized or adopted such acts, or similar acts done on other occasions by the assumed agent. There is nothing in the evidence which shows that the defendant knew that the plaintiff was acting as subagent for him at any time, or that he acquiesced in, recognized or adopted similar acts done on other occasions by the plaintiff, with the single exception, above referred to, of the sale effected by the plaintiff when a representative of the defendant was in Wilmington with their agent Jackson. This one transaction was not enough to show a course of business or dealing between the parties from which an agency could be reasonably inferred; and besides, the defendant’s representative
The Court are clear that there was no relation of principal and subagent between the plaintiff and defendant at any time unless the defendant’s agents, Jackson & Co., were authorized to appoint a subagent to assist them in the transaction of defendant’s business.
It is not claimed that Jackson & Co. were expressly authorized by the defendant to employ a subagent. Were they impliedly authorized to do so? Such authority may be inferred from the acquiescence of the principal or the nature of the business. If the business the agents have to do is of such character as to require the appointment of another person for its proper conduct and successful prosecution, and the principal could reasonably anticipate such action by his agent, and impliedly assented thereto, the agent has the right to make such appointment, and the person so appointed becomes the subagent of the principal who is responsible for his reasonable compensation. Such we think is the law, and a familiar example is the employment of an attorney to prosecute a claim which the agent is directed to collect.
In many real estate transactions, where the agent is unable to properly conduct the business entrusted to him without assistance he has been permitted to employ a subagent. Other instances or cases might be mentioned, but they are all predicated on the nature of the business, and the need of assistance, the principal’s reasonable anticipation of its requirements, and his implied assent thereto. It would be dangerous, and without legal justification, we think, to hold that an agent can bind his principal for the compensation of a subagent whose appointment the principal neither authorized, approved, had knowledge of, or could reasonably anticipate. The general rule is, that an agent cannot appoint a subagent without the consent of his principal. To that rule there are, as we have said, some exceptions, but we do not think the present case falls -within any of them.
Ellis Jackson & Co. were the agents of the defendant in the selling of chemicals. Their place of business was in Philadelphia,
We think it unnecessary to review or comment at any length on the cases cited by the plaintiff to sustain his contention that Ellis Jackson & Co. were authorized from the nature of their business to employ the plaintiffs as subagent of the defendant. We think they are not in point. One of such cases involved the employment of an attorney to institute legal proceedings, and some of them involved large real estate transactions. These are well recognized exceptions to the general rule. In one case (Dewing et al. v. Hutton, 48 W. Va. 576, 37 S. E. 670), the plaintiffs by their many acts of acceptance, ratified what their general agent had done.
In the case of Raike v. Manhattan Rubber Co., 127 Mo. App. 480, 105 5. W. 1100, the agent had charge of a district covering a large territory and had large powers in respect to carrying on the business entrusted to him.
In some of the cases the agency could be inferred from the conduct of the parties to the original contract of agency, and in others the question of agency was not distinctly involved. It is hardly necessary to note the difference between the cases relied on by the plaintiff and the case at bar, in which there was no continuing agency, where the nature of the business did not necessarily require the employment of a subagent, and assent or ratification by the defendants could not be reasonably inferred. The plaintiff was employed by Jackson & Co. to act as broker for them whenever he found that he could make a sale to the Du Pont Company, and in each case Jackson & Co. quoted him prices, and for his services paid him commissions. He was never otherwise paid, and never received other compensation. Obviously this is a very different case from any cited by the plaintiff.
It is no doubt true, as stated by Mechem in his work on Agency, section 296, that though the facts may be undisputed, there may fairly be difference of opinion as to the inferences, and in such cases it is for the jury to determine, under proper instructions from the Court, whether agency exists. But it is equally true, as stated in the same work at section 295—
“Where the facts are undisputed and only one inference can be drawn from them, the Court must determine whether they create an agency, * * * and this is equally true whether it is sought to establish the agency by previous authorization or by subsequent ratification.”
In reaching our conclusion on the question of agency, we have not been unmindful of the fact that in the present case, where binding instructions were given for the defendant, the question is, not whether the alleged agency was proved, but whether there was any evidence which would reasonably support a verdict for the plaintiff and upon which the jury would have been justified in finding such verdict. We are of the opinion there was no such evidence, and that if a verdict for the plaintiff had been rendered thereon, the Court would have been compelled to set it aside.
We think there was no error in the refusal of the lower court to admit the testimony covered by appellant’s assignments of error.
The first assignment says, the Court erred in refusing to admit as evidence a letter dated January 23, 1915, from Ellis Jackson & Company to the James Bradford Company. It was offered to show that Ellis Jackson & Company treated the James Bradford Company as their agent and not as a purchaser. The Court properly regarded the letter as immaterial, and for that reason refused to admit it. Counsel for the defendants conceded that the plaintiff was agent for Ellis Jackson & Company, and that was all the letter was designed to show or could show. It had no bearing on the real issue in the case, viz., whether the plaintiff was agent for Edward Hill’s Son & Company, the defendants.
The second assignment says, the Court erred in refusing to admit as evidence the testimony of a clerk for Ellis Jackson Co. and of the general manager of the defendants, that Ellis Jackson & Co. received from the defendants commissions on the sales embraced in appellant’s bill of particulars. The testimony ,vas also regarded by the Court as immaterial, and propeily so, because
The court are of the opinion that there is no error in the proceedings of the Court below, and its judgment will therefore be affirmed.