27 Mont. 463 | Mont. | 1903
delivered tbe opinion of tbe court.
By tbis action recovery is sought by tbe plaintiff of tbe sum of $1,691.31, tbe amount of an account wbicb be alleges be sold to tbe defendant at its face value; and wbicb tbe defendant promised to pay. Tbe account was for a boiler sold and delivered to tbe Sbonbar Mining Company, and for labor done in its bebalf. Upon a former appeal to tbis court, a judgment in favor of tbe plaintiff was reversed and a new trial granted because of error during tbe trial in tbe exclusion of certain evidence. (Mahoney v. Butte Hardware Co., 19 Mont. 377, 48 Pac. 545.) A complete statement of tbe case precedes tbe former opinion. It is therefore not necessary to1 repeat it here. By reference to that statement, it appears that tbe issue between tbe parties on tbe first trial was whether tbe transaction between tbe plaintiff and tbe manager of tbe defendant corporation amounted to' a sale of the account, or whether it was an assignment of it only for tbe purpose of collection. Incidentally there was also involved tbe question whether tbe defendant corporation bad tbe power under its charter to make tbe purchase, and also whether the manager was authorized to make it for tbe company. Tbe plaintiff then contended that be could have secured bis account by filing a statutory notice of a mechanics’ or furnishers’ lien, and that tbe purpose of tbe purchase by tbe defendant was to protect a claim it held against tbe Sbonbar Mining Company, wbicb was unsecured, and therefore inferior
Many errors are assigned upon the admission and exclusion of evidence and upon the instructions submitted to the jury. The point is also1 made that the evidence is insufficient to justify the verdict. In their briefs counsel have discussed extensively the power of the defendant corporation under its charter to purchase such claims for any purpose, as well as the principles of law of agency applicable. We shall not give special notice to any of the errors assigned. ' A careful consideration of the record reveals no prejudicial error in any ruling of the court upon questions of the admissibility of evidence. There was evidence that the manager had authority to purchase, and that he did purchase, the plaintiff’s account, as plaintiff contended. Touching the contention that the purchase was ultra vires of the corporation, this court on the former appeal said: “It was not per se• an act [of] ultra vires for the appellant to purchase claims against the Shonbar Mining Company, secured by liens, in order to protect its own account. Conceding that it was organized to do1 a hardware business only, still if, in the course of its legitimate business, it became necessary, in the exercise of business prudence, to purchase these claims for the protection
The judgment and order appealed from are affirmed.
Affirmed.