Ladenberg v. Beal-Doyle Dry Goods Co.

83 Ark. 440 | Ark. | 1907

McCulloch, J.

The plaintiffs (appellants), Ladenberg, Thalman &'Co., are bankers in the city of New York, and advanced large sums of money during the year 1903 to the James Freeman Brown Company (hereinafter called the Brown Company) who were mill agents in said city, selling the product of various cloth factories. They sold merchandise to wholesale merchants throughout the country, and as they made sales they pledged the accounts against their customers to the plaintiffs, and other bankers making advances tó them, as collateral security for said advances.

When they made sales to customers, duplicate invoices were made out, one on a bill-head of plaintiffs, reciting that it was for merchandise delivered by James Freeman Brown Company,, and bearing the following indorsement in red ink: “Make all remittances to Badenberg, Thalman & Company, P. O. Box 375, New York.” This was delivered to plaintiffs, and by them mailed to the purchaser. The other was made out on their own bill-head, bearing the following indorsement in type: “This bill is payable to Badenberg, Thalman & Company, 25 Broad St., New York. Make checks payable to order Badenberg, Thalman & Company, and mail direct.” This was also mailed to the customer by the .Brown Company.

The defendant, Beal-Doyle Dry Goods Company, a corporation engaged in the wholesale dry goods business in the city of Bittle Rock, was a customer of the Brown Company, and in the spring of 1903 gave an order to the Brown Company for goods aggregating about $30,000 in price. These goods were shipped from time to time up to and including the month of August, 1903, and invoices therefor were sent in the manner just described. All of these invoices were not, however, pledged to plaintiffs, but some were pledged to other bankers.

The Brown Company became insolvent in December, 1903, and went into bankruptcy; and the plaintiffs instituted this action to recover the sum of $739.42 on three invoices of goods sold to defendant and pledged to the plaintiffs, aggregating the above-named amount. Defendant had paid these sums direct to the Brown Company when the bills fell due, as well as many other invoices pledged to plaintiffs, and had also made remittances to plaintiff covering other invoices. All of the other remittances made to the Brown Company covering invoices which had been assigned to plaintiffs were, it appears, reported to plaintiffs by the Brown Company and satisfactorily accounted for in some way, but no report of the payment of these invoices was made. All- these transactions occurred before- the Brown Company went into bankruptcy. After the adjudication in bankruptcy, appellants wrote to appellee for the first time demanding payment of these invoices.

When defendant gave the order for the goods to the travelling salesman of the Brown Company, none of its (defendant’s) officers or agents were apprised of any interest of the plaintiffs in the sales, and the only notice or information given to defendant of the pledges of the invoices to plaintiffs was the indorsements upon the invoices already described. Plaintiffs communicated no objection to defendant to the payments made-" direct to the Brown Company, though it is shown by the evidence that defendant made remittances from time to time direct to plaintiffs after having made remittances to the Brown Company, on the pledged invoices, some of which remittances were reported to plaintiffs and accounted for as already stated. Was-the jury unwarranted, under these circumstances, in returning a verdict in favor of the defendant ?

The court gave the following instruction over the objection of the plaintiff:

“If you find from the evidence -that the debt from Beal-Doyle Company to James Freeman Brown Company was pledged to plaintiffs, and that the goods for the purchase of which the debt was created were delivered to Beal-Doyle Company with notice to-pay the -price therefor to plaintiffs, and Beal-Doyle accepted • the goods with said notice, then an implied promise arose on the part of Beal-Doyle to pay plaintiffs therefor, and payment to-James Freeman Brown would not discharge that promise, and your verdict will be for plaintiffs, unless you find from the evidence that Laden-berg, Thalman & Company, the plaintiffs,, prior to the payment of the accounts in question to James Freeman Brown Company, knew that Beal-Doyle Dry Goods Company were making payments to James Freeman Brown Company as agent of plaintiffs on accounts assigned to plaintiffs, or had knowledge of such circumstances as would put a reasonably prudent person -upon inquiry as to whether such payments were1 being made, and the prosecution of such inquiry would have led to the disclosure of the fact that Beal-Doyle Dry Goods Company were making payments to James Freeman Brown, as agents-of plaintiffs, and with such knowledge or knowledge of such circumstances plaintiffs made no protest against such payments, but acquiesced therein, then plaintiffs by their acquiescence in1 such course of dealings between defendant and James Freeman Brown waived the right to insist upon payments being made to them, and under such circumstances they cannot recover against Beal-Doyle Dry Goods Company for the accounts sued on, if" you find they were paid to James Freeman Brown.”

We think the instruction was a correct statement of the law applicable to the case, and that the evidence warranted the verdict. ' The goods were purchased from the Brown Company by appellee, and appellee’s officers and agents, of course, knew that the former were interested in collecting the price, notwithstanding the pledge to appellants. Appellants were advised that appellee was making payments from time to time on the pledged invoices direct to the Brown Company and made no objection thereto. In. some instances the Brown Company delivered the checks over to appellants, and in other instances merely reported the collections, and the invoices were stricken off the list of pledges. They permitted the Brown Company to make collections from customers as if the invoices had not been pledged, and acquiesced in the payments made direct to them.

We -have not here a case where a single payment was made and accepted, but where such payments were repeatedly made and acquiesced in by appellants. They stood by and tolerated, without objection or protest, the course of conduct on the part of the Brown Company in accepting payment on the pledged invoices when they must have known that the payments were made in reliance that the Brown Company had authority to collect. One cannot accept the benefit of the act of an assumed agent and remain silent without binding himself by those .acts, nor can he, when he has acquiesced in the course of conduct of an assumed agent, be heard to say that no authority existed. State v. Hill, 50 Ark. 458.

“It is a very clear and salutary rule in relation to agencies that when a principal, with the knowledge of all the facts, adopts or acquiesces in the acts done under an assumed agency, he cannot be heard afterward to impeach them, under the pretense they were done without .authority or even contrary to instruction.” Kelsey v. National Bank, 69 Pa. St. 426.

Nor is this a case where a creditor merely accepts a payment made to one without authority, or pretense of interest or authority, under circumstances where it may be .assumed that the one making the payment constituted the other his agent to pay the money over to the proper party to whom it is due. These payments were made to the Brown Company, which had an interest in the collection -as pledger, and appellants had no right to -assume that appellee, in paying to the Brown Company, ■meant to constitute the latter its agent for the purpose of transmitting the funds to appellants. On the contrary, they must have known that appellee was paying to the Brown Company as appellant’s agents, believing they had authority to collect. The fact that appellants in some instances permitted the Brown Company to retain the funds collected and relinquished their rights in the invoices covered thereby, shows that they treated the Brown Company as their agent, and not the -agent of appellee.

We think the evidence warranted the jury in finding that appellants repeatedly ratified the acts of the Brown Company in collecting amounts due on pledged invoices, and, by failing to make objection, consented to the making of payments in that way. They cannot, after having done that, complain of the payments thus made and demand payment a second time from appellee.

' Judgment affirmed.

Battle, J., dissents.
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