161 Ga. 382 | Ga. | 1925
Johnston-Crews Company brought suit against Smith, on open account. In his answer Smith set up that he had never purchased anything from the plaintiff; that his only dealings with the plaintiff had been as its agent; that he had never received from the’plaintiff any goods except upon consignment;
As to the second ground, the contentions of the petitioner for certiorari are that the charge given was erroneous, because (a) it involved the question of ratification of the unauthorized act of an
On the trial of the case all of the evidence for the plaintiff was unqualifiedly to the effect that the goods shipped by JohnstonOrews Company to Smith were on contract of sale; that the contract was such as is usual in the case of a wholesale merchant selling to a retail merchant on time. The traveling salesman who exclusively dealt with the defendant in making the sale for the plaintiff testified unqualifiedly that the goods were shipped on straight order and charged to the account of the defendant, and that said salesman “never did any time sell Mr. Smith for Johnston-Crews Company any goods on consignment;” that the orders were taken by the salesman from February 10, 1930, to August 18, 1930. The goods were shipped on orders signed by the traveling salesman, and siich orders were not signed by the defendant. The defendant, from time to time, paid the plaintiff several sums by check, amounting in the aggregate to $3650, leaving a balance due of $3774.95 and interest. The defendant Smith, testifying in his own behalf, admitted the receipt of all of the goods charged to him, and further testified that the traveling salesman of the plaintiff came to his place of business and talked with him about the goods, but that he did not buy any goods, that the traveling salesman said to him “I will tell you what I’ll do. If you will let me have charge of your store, I will go through and see what you need and ship it out; and if you can’t sell what I ship you, I will take it off your hands. That is the kind of trade I made with John Gaskins over there at Willacoochee,' and I have already shipped them out to him, and that is what I will do with you.” The defendant further testified that he told the salesman that he had all
Prior to the filing of the suit the store and its contents were burned.
The first headnote does not require elaboration.
Error is assigned on the following charge of the court: “A principal is bound by all the acts of his agent within the scope of his authority; if the agent exceeds his authority, the principal can not ratify in part and repudiate in part; he must adopt either the whole or none. In that connection, if Mr. Hunt representing Johnston-Crews Company had no authority to make the consignment, if you find there was one, but went on and sold the goods and did make an assignment, then the principal, Johnston-Crews Co., when informed of the fact, and had knowledge, of such consignment, they must repudiate the entire consignment, or they must accept it.” The criticisms are: (a) “said charge was not applicable to the issues and the evidence in the case, and tended to confuse the jury.” (b) “the evidence did not show that the agent of the plaintiff had authority to sell on consignment, and there was no question of ratification involved.” (c) “Said charge expressed an opinion that Johnston-Crews Co. was informed that the goods had been sold on consignment, and had knowledge of such sale; the evidence showing conclusively that the plaintiff was never informed by the defendant or any one else that the goods were sold on consignment, and had no knowledge of such claim by the defendant until after the filing of the suit.” The Court of Appeals did not err in the following ruling, on the above-stated ground: “The excerpt from the charge complained of is not subject to any of the criticisms urged against it. The evidence was in sharp conflict, one part thereof tending to establish the truth of the plaintiff’s petition, the other to establish the truth of the defendant’s plea; and the verdict thereon, having the approval of the trial judge, can not be disturbed by this court.” As shown by the facts herewith reported, the evidence was in conflict on the controlling issue between the parties; that is, whether there was a straight sale of goods by the plaintiff to the defendant on account, or whether the plaintiff shipped the goods to the defendant on an
“The absence of a limitation on the price at which goods may be sold by a consignee who has to account to his consignor at a fixed price will not transform an agreement made in good faith, and clearly intended by both parties to be one of agency, into a contract of sale. Where by the terms of the contract the owner or consignor retains the right to demand the return of the property at any time without default on the part of the person to whom it is delivered, the transaction is properly one of bailment or agency, and not of sale. The fact that goods are billed to a party as though a sale had been made is of more or less persuasive force, although not conclusive, that the transaction was a sale and not a bailment. The contract may be one of agency, although the agent is to find his compensation in the discount allowed him by the principal from the usual price, or in the advance he may be able to secure from third persons above the principal’s price to him; or, it would seem, even though the contract provides no compensation at all for the agent.” 6 C. J. 1094. Compare National Bank v. Goodyear, 90 Ga. 711, 726 (16 S. E. 962). “The distinction between agency contracts creating bailments and contracts of sale is not always clear, and borderland cases are frequently encountered the decisions in which are not easily reconcilable. It is of course well settled that in a sale title passes t'o the buyer, while in an agency title remains in the principal, although possession is transferred to the agent.” 6 C. J. 1091; McGaw v. Hanway, 120 Md. 197 (87 Atl. 666, Ann. Cas. 1915A, 601). In the note to the McG-aw ease a number of authorities are cited to sustain the principle just announced. In one of them, Ex parte White, L. R.
The court, in that part of the charge of which complaint is made, used the word “consignment.” A “consignee,” as usually
Moreover, if the traveling salesman was without authority to make the contract as contended for by the defendant, this alone would not, as a matter of law, bind the defendant to accept the goods on the basis of an outright sale, and thus to be bound by a contract to which he did not assent. So, in this instance the question at last is one for the determination of the jury on the evidence submitted, and it appears that the jury accepted the evidence of the defendant, which negatives the contention that he entered into a contract of sale. In Hopkins v. Armour, 8 Ga. App. 442, 444 (69 S. E. 580), that court was dealing with a case very similar in some respects. It involved the question of principal and agent, and the authority of the latter in the sale of goods, and the duty devolving upon the buyer in respect to such authority. Judge Bus-sell, speaking for the court, said: “It would never do to hold that one could not appoint an agent with authority to sell goods, without the necessity of having the bargain confirmed, even though the latter method of sale is the more usual. It is apparent that the defendant in the present case was of the opinion that the salesman had authority to sell. He could have bought the lard compound from another salesman who was at the time in his store, endeavoring to sell to him, if Armour & Co.’s salesman had not induced him to buy f-rom them. To say that in no case could a merchant authorize his salesman to make a binding trade in his behalf would paralyze business, because the buyer would never know whether he could rely upon having the goods he contracted for shipped or not, and, therefore, know that his stock would be seasonably replenished. According to the testimony of Mr. Hopkins, the inference that Mr. Snow had authority to bind Armour & Co. by
The third headnote does not require elaboration.
Judgment affirmed.