198 F. 453 | 8th Cir. | 1912
The Speer Hardware Company, a corporation, sued W. A. Lamon and J. W. Wallace for the purchase price of a cotton gin and other machinery and recovered a judgment of $8,073.82 on April 2, 1906, in the United States Court for the Western District of the Indian Territory. The defendants sued out a writ of error from the United States Court of Appeals in the Indian Territory to rev.erse this judgment and gave a supersedeas bond dated September 29, 1906, with A. C. Miller, Fred Walker, B. A. Brunson, John W. G-ibson, and William C. Edwards as sureties. The United States Court for the Eastern District of Oklahoma, to which this case had been transferred under legislation enacted subsequent to the rendition of the judgment, affirmed the judgment below in the year 1910 and rendered a judgment against Lamon and Wallace that the judgment of the court below was affirmed, that it appeared that that judgment against them below was for $8,073.82, that the interest thereon was $2,159.42, that it also appeared that they had executed a super-
“The rule which requires parties to a judgment or decree to join in an appeal or writ of error, or be detached from the right by some proper proceeding. or by (heir renunciation, is firmly established. Hut the rule only applies to joint judgments or decrees. In other words, when the interest of a defendant is separate from that of other defendants he may appeal without them.” Winters v. United States, 207 U. S. 564, 574, 28 Sup. Ct. 207, 210, 52 L. Ed. 340.
Prior to March 3, 1905, appeals to the Court of Appeals of the Indian Territory were governed by the laws of Arkansas set forth in Mansfield’s Digest (Act March 1, 1895, c. 145, § 11, 28 Stat. 693, 698). Those laws provided that a supersedeas should be allowed upon the giving of a bond conditioned “that the appellant shall pay to the appellee all costs and damages that shall be adjudged against the appellant on appeal; also that he will satisfy and perform the judgment
No law of the state of Oklahoma has been called to our attention which empowers any court of that state to render a judgment against sureties on a supersedeas bond without a suit against them upon the bond, except in cases of appeals to the district courts from probate courts and courts of justices of the peace (Compiled Daws of Oklahoma, § 6398), so that there does not appear to have been any authority to enter the judgment below under the Act of Conformity (Revised Statutes of United States, § 914 [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 684]). There is no act of Congress which expressly authorizes such a judgment, and while cases may be found where, upon a notice of motion, or an order to show cause duly served upon the sureties, such judgments have been rendered under the Act of Conformity where a state statute empowered the courts of the state to follow that practice (Egan v. Chicago Great Western Ry. Co. [C. C.] 163 Fed. 344, afid cases there cited), no case has challenged attention where a judgment against sureties on a supersedeas bond without any suit upon it against them, without any notice to the sureties of the contemplated judgment and without express legislative authority to enter it without such notice, has ever been sustained. The record in this case discloses such a judgment, a judgment that appears by this record to be coram non judice and void as to the sureties. And the conclu
A principal is as conclusively bound to innocent third parties by the act of his agent in the exercise of the apparent authority within the scope of his agency with which his master clothes him as he is by
The witnesses Walker an.d Ramon testified that the latter told Kobel that he knew nothing about the gin plant, that he would buy it if ¡ Kobel would furnish the plans and specifications, put up the machinery, , and make it run, and Kobel agreed to do so. Upon this issue of the terms of the contract Kobel testified that he never made any agreement to make the plans and specifications, to set up the machinery, or to put it in running order, and there were therefore two witnesses that the contract claimed by the plaintiff was made, and the facts that ■ the’ plaintiff after the sale sent his agent to the defendants’ place to. ■ set it up, and that after it was started it promised and endeavored to malte it satisfactory. ■ ■ :
The gin was started the last of September, 1901; there was substan-- • tial evidence that it would not operate properly; about the 15th or 20th of'October, Mr. Speer went to the defen,dants’ place of business and examined the plant, ordered a new set of suction pipes, and promised to fix it the next season. ' The next season a Mr. Johnson went to the defendants’ place of business, overhauled and ■ rebuilt the plant, and oír his orders the defendants paid the e-xpen.ses • thereof, which afnounted to $3,015.14; but they paid Mr. Johnson nothing. The plaintiff furnished to the defendants a new engine in place of that which it had sold to them the year before, and it also- furnished to • them a new boiler. ■ But Mr. Speer testified that the plaintiff sold them the new boiler and agreed to allow them $700 for the old boiler on. condition that they would pay what they owed. He also testified that Mr-. Johnson was a man sent to the defendants at the plaintiff’s request by 'Rumus & Sons Gin Company, the manufacturers-of the plant, to look over the machinery, under a custom that if the machinery was found' defective the Gin Company would pay, and if it was found without defects' the Speer Hardware Company would pay the expense of sending the agent. He testified further that the plaintiff authorized Mr. Johnson “to go up there and look the machinery over and do anything he could to- assist them and get the fhatter in • good condition,” but that he gave him no authority from the plaintiff ■ to change the buildings', or to buy machinery, or to buy attachments, or to do anything more than to overhaul the machinery. After Mr;' John,son had examined the-plant, he returned with Mr. Ramon to Mr. Speer and-h'ád a conversation , with him in-which Ramon testified that'■ Johnson told Mr. Spéér'that the oid boiler .positively was not of suffi-:
A careful reading of the testimony has also convinced that there was substantial evidence at the trial in support of the seventh count of the answer to the effect that the defendants were compelled to- and did pay $50 to hire men to handle the cotton during the year 1911, because the plaintiff failed to furnish and set up tlic machinery for unloading the cotton as it had agreed to do.