66 S.E. 212 | N.C. | 1909
The plaintiff corporation sued the defendants, as partners, to recover an amount due it for goods sold and delivered. The defendant T. J. Renfrow alone answered and contested the plaintiff's right to recover against him. The plaintiff, in its complaint, alleged "that on 27 May, 1907, it sold and delivered to the defendants a lot of shoes, of the value," etc. The contesting defendant denied his liability, on the ground that the partnership between him and his codefendant had been dissolved on 28 March, 1907, and notice of dissolution had been published in a *316 newspaper published in Wilkesboro, N.C. where the partnership did business, the plaintiff doing business in Winston-Salem, and that notice of such dissolution had been given to W. N. Horn, the traveling salesman of plaintiff, its agent who had taken the order sued upon and all other orders from defendant for plaintiff. It was admitted by the defendant that the partnership existed up to 28 March, 1907, and was formed in 1904; that his copartner, G. V. Renfrow, his son, had the entire management of the business and did all its buying and selling; that he lived in Mecklenburg County; that when the partnership was dissolved he took from his copartner his note, secured by a mortgage on certain described lands in Mecklenburg County. The plaintiff offered evidence of the continued advertisement in the paper stated by G. V. Renfrow Co. for some months after the alleged dissolution, and denied it had any notice of the dissolution at the date mentioned in the complaint. It further appeared in evidence that the salesman of the plaintiff, Horn, took the order from G. V. Renfrow on 4 April, 1907, but it was subject to acceptance by the plaintiff. The plaintiff's salesman admitted he received notice of the dissolution before 15 May; that it was within his duty to notify plaintiff when he received notice of dissolution of partnerships who were dealing with it, and he sometimes received money from customers when they offered it. It was in evidence that the agent, Horn, (325) was notified on 4 April of the dissolution, but this was denied by him. His Honor charged the jury that unless the notice of dissolution was given to the agent, Horn, on or before 4 April, no subsequent notice would avail the defendant. The defendant excepted. The jury answered the issue of indebtedness in favor of the plaintiff. From the judgment rendered upon the verdict the defendant T. J. Renfrow appealed to this Court. After stating the case: If Horn was such an agent of the plaintiff that notice to him would be imputed to the plaintiff, then we think his Honor was in error in restricting the time at which the notice of the dissolution should have been given, in order to be binding upon his principal, the plaintiff, to the date "on or before 4 April." While the order for the goods sued for was taken by Horn on 4 April, it was made by Horn subject to the acceptance of the plaintiff. The acceptance of the order was signified by the shipment of the goods on 27 May, and in no other way. The complaint alleged both sale and delivery on that day, and in our consideration of this appeal we must consider the plaintiff concluded by this allegation of his pleading. This allegation was *317 distinctly presented to his Honor by the defendant, and instructions asked and refused. The agent admitted he had notice of the withdrawal of the defendant T. J. Renfrow from the partnership before 15 May, and that he was then the agent of the plaintiff, with the same scope and extent of authority as theretofore.
In Mechem on Agency, sec. 721, the learned author deduces the following rule from the authorities: "The law imputes to the principal and charges him with all notice or knowledge relating to the subject-matter of the agency which the agent acquires or obtains while acting as such agent and within the scope of his authority or which he may previously have acquired, and which he then had in mind, or which he had acquired so recently as to reasonably warrant the assumption that he still retained it. Provided, however, that such notice or knowledge will not be imputed (1) where it is such as it is the agent's duty not to disclose, and (2) where the agent's relation to the subject-matter or his previous conduct render it certain that he will not disclose it, and (3) where the person claiming the benefit of the notice, or those whom he represents, colluded with the agent to cheat or defraud the principal." There is no evidence in this case bringing it within any of the exceptions named in the proviso of the above rule. This Court, in Straus v. Sparrow, 148 (326) N.C. 309, quotes with approval this principle, as stated in Coxv. Pearce,
If, therefore, Horn was such an agent that notice to him was notice to his principal, the plaintiff, then, under the above authorities, it must follow that the plaintiff had notice of the withdrawal of the defendant T. J. Renfrow from the firm, and its dissolution before 15 May — between 6 and 15 May, as fixed by Horn. No credit had then been extended for the goods ordered on 4 April. In Bisban v. Boyd, 4 Page Chan., 16, it is held: "If he (a former customer) was informed of the dissolution of the partnership immediately after the sale and while the goods remained in his own hands, undelivered, a court of equity would never permit him to recover for those goods against the former partners of the vendee." Notice of the dissolution is a rescission of the order. Goodspeed v. Plow Co.,
In Cowan v. Roberts,
New trial.
Cited: Furniture Co. v. Bussell,