Lepman v. Woods

79 Ill. App. 269 | Ill. App. Ct. | 1898

Me. Justice Shepard,

after making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.

The statement of facts comprises, in substance, all the material evidence submitted to the jury.

Briefly epitomized, Moss, without previous authority, bought from appellee, for the account of appellants, a quantity of perishable property, which appellee immediately consigned to appellants and notified them of the transaction. This telegraphic notification, and the invoice that immediately followed, expressly stated the transaction to have been made by Moss as appellants’ broker.

Moss also telegraphed appellants at once of the transaction.

Appellants, on the next day, acknowledged, by letter to appellee, receipt of appellee’s telegram, and proceeded to propose further business relations with appellee, without expressing any dissent from, or disaffirmance of, Moss’ action.

The obvious and natural inference to be drawn from such circumstances is that appellants acquiesced in and affirmed the act of Moss. Appellee could hardly have drawn any other inference. And the jury had a right to so infer, and we think any fair-minded man would agree that they should so infer.

It must be kept in mind that appellants never, at any time afterward, communicated with appellee upon the subject. As between appellee and appellants alone, the transaction began and ended with appellee’s telegram and invoice of January 22d, and appellant’s letter of January 23d. It was only to Moss that appellants ever repudiated the authority that Moss assumed.

The case is not, whether or not there was authorized original agency, but is one of assumed agency, known to the purported principals, and conduct by the lattér in adoption or affirmance of the previously unauthorized act of the agent.

We do not consider the law applicable to the case of a mere stranger, or volunteer, without original authority, and no affirmance of his act, as applicable to the case at bar.

Acquiescence, or even silence under conditions making it a duty to speak, may frequently be good ground to hold one dealing with another, to the prejudice of the latter, as bound by ratification through implication of law, and as estopping him so acquiescing or remaining silent from denying the contract as against the party prejudiced.

The circumstances of whether loss and injury to the party acting in good faith might fairly be presumed to follow from a failure to disaffirm the act of an assumed agent, will, we understand, be a material element for consideration in all cases of claimed acquiescense, or ratification by implication. Under the circumstances of this case there can be no question of lack of positive knowledge by appellants that the effect of leaving a carload of bananas upon a railroad track, in the middle of winter, in a northern climate, would be disastrous.

Illustrative of this doctrine, as applied to varied facts and circumstances, are: I. & St. L. R. R. Co. v. Morris, 67 Ill. 295; Hall v. Harper, 17 Ill. 82; Johnston v. Berry, 3 Ill. App. 256; Ward v. Williams, 26 Ill. 447; DeLand v. Dixon Nat. Bank, 111 Ill. 323; Heyn v. O’Hagen, 60 Mich. 150.

Giving to the verdict every reasonable intendment, we must conclude that the jury found as a fact everything necessary to support the recovery, and it would not be just to disturb their finding on the question of whether or not there was an affirmance by appellants of the act of Moss.

Appellants argue alleged errors by the trial court in overruling their several objections interposed to the depositions of three witnesses on behalf of appellee. It is sufficient to say that the objections made to the depositions were general and not specific. The questions put to the several witnesses were proper in form and competent in substance.' It is not unlikely that some of the answers were, in part, objectionable, but the objections that were interposed were in no degree specific, and we infer from the record that the trial judge did not have his attention directed to any phase of the subject, except as to whether or not the objections were made in apt time.

The ruling of the court, in the absence of a specific pointing out of the objectionable matter, was not error.

It is also claimed that the trial court improperly excluded a series of letters that passed between appellants and Moss between November 8, 1896, and February 9, 1897. The only ground of error asserted by appellants is that the letters'constitute part of the res gestae. A careful reading of the correspondence fully justifies the exclusion of the letters. Nothing material or relevant to the issues involved between the parties to this suit is contained in either of the letters.

The general principles already spoken of dispose of all substantial questions concerning the instructions that are complained about, except the one asked by appellee that was modified by the court. The modification was rather in appellants’ favor than against them, and affords no ground of complaint by them.

Upon the whole record the case ought to be affirmed, and it is so ordered. Judgment affirmed.