Komorowski v. Krumdick

56 Wis. 23 | Wis. | 1882

Taylob, J.

The evidence may have a tendency to prove three things: First, that the plaintiff sold his- wheat to Grist as the agent of the defendants upon credit; second, that he did not sell it to any one except as to the forty bushels for which he received his pay; and, third, that he sold it to Grist upon the terms set out in the complaint. If the learned circuit judge was right in his construction of the checks given to the plaintiff by Grist, that they were evidence of a sale, and not that the wheat was delivered to Grist in store for the plaintiff, the price to be fixed by the market price at some future day (upon which point we give no opinion), then such checks and the other evidence might justify a jury in finding either a sale to Grist individually or a sale to him as the agent of the defendants. But if it proved a sale to Grist as the agent of the defendants at the time of the delivery of the wheat, then it was clearly a sale upon credit, and not for cash; and if it could be construed as a sale to Grist, as agent of the defendants at the time he got his pay for the forty bushels, which is the time he says he got the checks given in evidence, then it was still a sale on credit, and was made after Grist had ceased to act as agent for the defendants. In *27either case the sale to and purchase by Grist would not bind these defendants. The power of Grist as the agent of the defendants was limited to purchases for cash, and nothing else, and he was expressly prohibited from talcing wheat in store on their account.

When the principal furnishes his agent to buy on his account sufficient funds to make the purchases, the law does not raise any presumption that such agent may bind his principal by a purchase on credit, but the contrary. And in such case the principal will not be bound by a purchase made on credit, unless he has knowledge of the fact, and does something in ratification thereof, or unless it be shown that it is the custom of the trade to buy upon credit. The defendants furnished Grist the money to pay for all purchases made by him on their account, and the evidence tends to show that Grist did not deliver to them enough wheat to cover the amount of their advances. There is nothing in the evidence tending to show that the defendants held Grist out as having any other powers as their agent than those expressly conferred upon him. There is no evidence that the defendants had ever ratified any purchases by Grist for them upon credit. There is no evidence, in fact, that he ever made any purchase except of the plaintiff upon credit. Nor is there any evidence that an agent to purchase wheat for a principal at a given place, and to ship the same to the principal at another place, has any implied authority to make the purchases upon the credit of the principal. There is nothing in the nature of the business itself, in the absence of any evidence as to the- custom of the trade, which would justify a court in determining as a question of law that an agent to purchase wheat or other grain may bind his principal by a purchase on credit. An agent to buy wheat or other grain must, in order to bind his principal, who furnishes in advance the funds to make the purchases, buy for cash, unless he has express power to buy upon credit, or unless the custom of *28the trade is to buy upon credit; apd in the absence of express authority, or proof of the custom of the trade to buy on credit, such agent cannot bind his principal, by a purchase upon credit of a person who is ignorant of his real authority as between himself and his principal. Paley on Ag., 161, 162; Jaques v. Todd, 3 Wend., 83; Schimmelpennich v. Bayard, 1 Pet., 264; Story on Ag., §§ 225, 226; Berry v. Barnes, 23 Ark., 411; Stoddard v. McIlvain, 7 Rich. (S. C.), 525; Whart. on Ag., § 186; Adams v. Boies, 24 Iowa, 96; Tabor v. Cannon, 8 Met., 456; Temple v. Pomroy, 4 Gray, 128; Bank v. Bugbee, 1 Abb. Ch. App., 86.

We think the learned circuit judge erred in submitting the question of the power of Grist to bind the defendants by a purchase upon credit, and as to his power to receive it in store and hold it for the defendants upon a contract to pay for it at a future time, price to be fixed at the market price when the plaintiff should demand his pay. We are very clear that there is no evidence in the case which would justify a jury in finding that there was a sale and delivery of the wheat by the plaintiff to the defendants through their agent Grist, which bound the defendants. The great weight of the evidence tends to show that the plaintiff never sold the wheat to anyone, but that it was held in store by Grist for him, to be sold when the price was satisfactory, or when his necessities required him to have the money. In that view of thq case, if the wheat was afterwards delivered by Grist to the defendants without the consent of the plaintiff, and they received the same and converted it to their own use, they might be liable to the plaintiff in an action of tort, but not in an action upon contract for wheat sold and delivered, and for such cause of action he could not recover in ■ this action without first getting leave to amend his complaint. Pierce v. Carey, 37 Wis., 232-231; Supervisors v. Decker, 30 Wis., 624; Gaston v. Owen, 43 Wis., 103-106; Vassau v. Thompson, 46 Wis., 345-351. Whether; an amendment should be *29permitted in such case is a matter of grave doubt. See cases above cited.

If the evidence is sufficient to show a sale upon credit to Grist as agent of the defendants, and that the wheat was delivered to the defendants and received by them of Grist, still they would not be liable to the plaintiff unless they received the wheat knowing it had been bought upon credit, or they had received the -wheat of Grist knowing they had no funds in his hands at the time sufficient to pay for the same. If they furnished money to their agent sufficient at all times to pay for all the wheat they received from him, they had the right to suppose that all the wheat bought by Grist for them was paid for at the time it was delivered to them, and, if he had not in fact paid for it, they would only be liable to the seller under the circumstances above stated. The evidence as to what Grist said when the wheat was delivered to him, as to whom he was buying it for, was objectionable if offered for the purpose of showing he was buying it as agent of the defendants; but as the whole evidence shows that he was the agent of the defendants at the time the wheat was delivered, its admission could not injure the defendants. What was said by Grist to the plaintiff two days afterwards about his having sent the Avheat to the defendants was clearly inadmissible. There is, however, no objection to this part of the testimony. The refusal to permit the defendant to show that the plaintiff had arrested Grist for taking the wheat in question, was, we think, an error. The question in issue was whether the plaintiff had sold the wheat to the defendants. Any conduct or admission on the part of the plaintiff which tended to disprove such sale was clearly admissible against him. If he arrested Grist for the conversion of this wheat, it must have been on the theory that the wheat belonged to the plaintiff when such conversion took place; and that fact *30would be inconsistent with the other fact that it belonged to the defendants.

We think the verdict was wholly unsupported by the evidence, and for that reason the judgment should be reversed.

By the Court.— The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.

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