182 Iowa 179 | Iowa | 1917
On January 6, 1914, the defendant, Hawkeye Oil Company, sent the following order to the brokerage firm of A. T. Stewart Company:
“To A. T. Stewart Co.,-512 Postal Tel.. Bldg., Chicago, 111.
“Ship at once to The Hawkeye Oil Company, Waterloo, Iowa, 2 cars 72° gasoline at 13.65c f. o. b. Waterloo, Iowa.
“Waterloo, Iowa, 11-24-13.”
This order was received at' the A. T. Stewart Company in due course of mail. A. T. Stewart Company were merchant oil brokers, and soon after the receipt of this order, placed tjie same with the plaintiff, the Lawrence Gas Company, and the Lawrence Gas Company shipped the gasoline therein ordered to the Hawkeye Oil Company, and it was received by it at its home place.
The president of the Hawkeye Oil Company testified:
“I knew from whom this carload of oil had been shipped. We had a bill of lading and an invoice to show that it had been shipped by the Lawrence Gas Company.”
The original invoice received is in the following words and figures:
Lawrence Gas Company.
High-Grade Gasoline.
Bridgeport, Illinois, December 26, 1918.
Sold to Hawkeye Oil Co. Waterloo, Iowa.
Terms: 30 days Net 1% 10 days. f. o. b. Waterloo.
One tank car 72-74 Straight Run Gasoline G A T X 4170.
995.19
8,000 Gallons at 18.65c tí092.00
Shortage 432 .50
7,568 13.15
8,000 gals, at 6.6, 52, 800 ft at 24c Less Frt. 126.72
A. T. S. Order ft 854 -
H. O. Co. Order ft 5082 $ 868.47
15440 1% 8.68
127.69 -
Reed. 1-7-14 Jan. 7, 1914 859.79
ft 15251
P J 24
“I knew that the A. T. Stewart Co. had been doing business with a great many different companies, and that they act as brokers for a large number of refiners. I had reason to think that they were acting for the Lawrence Gas Company as brokers. This was before we purchased this gasoline.”
The president of the plaintiff, Lawrence Gas Company, testified that, when he made his arrangements with the Stewart Company to handle the product of the 'plaintiff, he told Mr. Stewart that the company was simply to sell the goods as a broker; that it, the plaintiff, would make its own collections.
This action is brought by the Lawrence Gas Company against the Hawkeye Oil Company, to recover the amount of the shipment. The defense plea is payment. The plea of payment relied on has its support in the fact only that, on the 6th day of January, 1914, 'the defendant, Hawkeye Oil Company, sent to the A. T. Stewart Company a check in the following form, ■ which was received by the A. T. Stewart Company, cashed by it, and the proceeds retained:
THE HAWKEYE OIL COMPANY, No. 15251.
Waterloo, Iowa, Jan. 6, 1914.
Pay to the order of Lawrence Gas Co. $859.79, Eight Hundred Fifty-nine and 79-100 Dollars.
NOT OVER NINE HUNDRED $900.
To Leavitt & Johnson National Bank,
Waterloo, Iowa.
The Hawkeye Oil Co.,
By H. S. Caward, Treas.
The question here presented is whether or not this is a payment to the plaintiff company that binds the plaintiff
It is apparent from this record that, when the defendant, Hawkeye Oil Company, mailed to the A. T. Stewart Company the order hereinbefore set out, it knew that A. T. Stewart Company Aras a broker only; that it did not liaA'e the commodity ordered for delivery; that, to ñll the order, it Avould be required to place it with some company that could
Agency is a broader term than broker, — -more comprehensive in its legal scope. A broker is an agent, but with limited authority. Ordinarily, they are not in any way connected with either the buyer or the seller of the property involved in any transaction. They are agents, it is true; but their powers are limited, and, when they have no charge or control over the property, but act only as go-betweens in effectuating a sale, they cannot be said to be
*186 “The decided weight of authority — indeed, well-nigh all the adjudged cases — supports the proposition that a traveling salesman of merchandise, making sales by sample on a credit -or for cash, to be paid on receipt of the goods or the invoice of them, has no implied authority to collect the monejr agreed to be paid from the purchaser” (citing many authorities).
Therein it distinguishes the Maine and Vermont cases relied upon by appellant in this case. See also Lyles-Black Co. v. Alldredge, 10 Ala. App. 632 (65 So. 696). The same doctrine is recognized in Minnesota (Brown v. Lally, 79 Minn. 38 [81 N. W. 538]).
In Bailey v. Pardridge, 134 Ill. 188 (27 N. E. 89), the court, while holding that the agent who sold the goods had a right to collect, and payment to him bound his principal, made the distinction as follows:
“Had the agent, Holmes, sold the defendants a bill of goods, and taken an order from them for a shipment of the goods from the house in Philadelphia, it is clear a payment to the agent for goods thus bought would not have been binding on the plaintiffs (Clark v. Smith, 88 Ill. 298). But this is a different case. Here, Holmes was not only clothed with the power of sale, but he had the possession of the goods, and was able to pass them over to the possession of the purchaser upon making sale and receiving payment.”
The distinction seems to be that, where the power to sell and to deliver is invested in the same agent, upon delivery he may receive payment and bind his principal.
In Law v. Stokes, 32 N. J. L. 249 (90 Am. Dec. 655), it. appears that plaintiff brought an action to recover the amount of a bill of goods sold by him to the defendant. The sale and delivery were admitted. The only question for determination was whether the defendant had paid for them. Plaintiff was an importer, and the defendant, a
“An agent employed to make sales, and selling on credit, is not authorized subsequently to collect the price in the name of the principal, and payment to him will not discharge the purchaser, unless he can show some authority in the agent other than that necessarily implied in a mere power to make sales. Such authority may be shown by proof, either that the agent was expressly authorized to receive and discharge debts, or that he was held out by his principal to the public, or to the defendant, as having such authority.”
See also Kane & Co. v. Barstow, 42 Kans. 465 (16 Am. St. 490). In this case, the rule is laid down that “authority to an agent to sell goods does not include authority'to collect pay for goods thus sold.” Why multiply authority? This doctrine was recognized by this court in Draper v. Rice, 56 Iowa 114; Englert v. White, 92 Iowa 97; and Sawin v. Union Building & Sav. Assn., 95 Iowa 477, 3d paragraph. The Bawin case was one in which the agent of the
“As such agent, he had the right to do whatever was usual and proper to effect sales, including the receiving of money paid on account of them. ‘A general agent is an agent who is empowered to transact all of the business of his principal of a particular kind or in a particular place.’ ”
Recovery was allowed on the theory that the seller of this stock was the general agent of the company, with power no.t only to sell, but to receive payment; and, for the purposes of the case, placed the agent in the same situation as a seller of goods would be in, who had possession of the goods and a right to deliver them. The court assumed that the agent had power to sell and pass title upon the sale. The sale was completed by the agent.
There is no evidence that any power or authority had been given the A. T. Stewart Company by appellant to make collections. It is not claimed by appellant that there was any direct authority to so do. The burden is on the defendant to show such authority, if they would bind the plaintiff company by payments made to the A. T. Stewart Company. There is no claim, and no testimony to support the claim if such were made, that the defendant was misled by the conduct of the plaintiff into believing that the A. T.. Stewart Company had authority to collect for the plaintiff
“Q. During the time that you sold goods for the Lawrence Gas Company, did you make collections for them? A. Yes, sir. Q. Did you at any time endorse checks that were made payable to them? A. The company did. ■ Q. Now, at any time before the transaction involved in this suit, did the Lawrence Gas Company make any objections to your making collections for them upon the goods that you had sold for them? A. No, sir.”
He was asked this question:
“Do you have personal knowledge of the fact, — that is, of somebody representing the A. T. Stewart Company endorsing checks at other times before that for the Lawrence Gas Company? A. Yes, sir. Q. Do you have personal knowledge of the fact that the Lawrence Gas Company asked you or your company to make collections for it on goods that you had sold for it? A. Yes, sir. Q. And were these collections made? A. Yes, sir.”
On cross-examination, he was asked to state to whom the sales were made on account of which the A. T. .Stewart Company had made collections. He named three companies, and in each of these cases it would seem that the Stewart Company did not rely upon general authority to collect, but procured special authority in the particular case to make collection; or made the collection without author
Every man is presumed to know the law, and the law is:
“A broker has, ordinarily, no authority to receive payment for property sold by him for his principal, and the purchaser who pays a broker does so at his own risk. Such payment does not discharge him from liability to the principal, unless the authority of the broker to receive payment be express or may reasonably be implied from the circumstances.” Robinson, Norton & Co. v. Corsicana Cotton Factory, 124 Ky. 435 (14 Am. & Eng. Ann. Cases 802).
On the whole record, we find that the court was wrong in sustaining defendant’s plea of payment, and the cause is, therefore, — Reversed.