115 N.Y. 556 | NY | 1889
The plaintiff seeks to recover the contract-price, for a lot of mustard seed sold through a broker by him to the defendants.
The defense, as stated by the answer, was that the sale was by sample and that the bulk did not correspond with the *559 sample, but was dirty, impure and inferior to the sample. It also alleged that this dirt and impurity was not discoverable upon inspection, and that the plaintiff knew the seed was dirty and impure, and upon the sale fraudulently represented that the same was clean and free from dirt and impurity, with the view of cheating and defrauding the defendant and to prevent such an examination of the seed as would have shown the dirt therein.
Upon the trial a written contract of sale was proved, showing a sale by sample. The evidence clearly established that the bulk delivered corresponded with the sample; but it was also shown that the seed was dirty and impure and that the plaintiff knew this fact. It was also proved on the trial that this impurity could be discovered by rubbing the grain in the hands, or on white paper; but whether it was visible and apparent from mere inspection was, upon the evidence, a disputed question.
The plaintiff's counsel at the close of the evidence moved that a verdict be directed in his favor, and the defendants made a similar motion on their own behalf. The latter motion was denied, and the defendants excepted. The defendants then moved that the case be sent to the jury. This motion did not state any question of fact desired to be submitted to the jury, and the motion was denied, to which decision the defendants excepted. The court thereupon directed a verdict for the plaintiff, to which direction the defendants excepted.
There was no error in these rulings upon the evidence as it stood, and unless there has been some error in the exclusion or admission of evidence to the prejudice of the defendants, the judgment should stand.
The defendants, however, claim that evidence offered by them tending to show that the contract of sale was obtained by fraudulent representations on the part of the plaintiff, was improperly excluded. The case shows that the defendants on the trial offered to prove that the broker making the contract for the plaintiff, represented that the seed proposed to be sold was clean and free from impurities. This evidence was *560 objected to by the plaintiff, and excluded by the court upon the ground that it tended to vary, enlarge and contradict the contract of sale. To this decision the defendants excepted.
There can be no question about the correctness of this ruling, if the evidence tended only to establish a warranty different from that expressed in the contract. The contract by its terms secured to the defendants a right to have the bulk of the goods sold correspond, as to quality and appearance, with the sample. (Hargous v. Stone,
In an action between vendor and vendee, knowledge possessed by either the principal or the agent is, respectively, imputable to each other, and an agent, whose principal has knowledge of latent defects in property proposed to be sold, cannot honestly represent to its intending purchaser that it is free from such defects. It is well settled in this state that a principal cannot retain the benefits of a contract obtained through the misrepresentations of his agent, even though the principal was ignorant of the representation and really intended no fraud. It was held in Bennett v. Judson (
It is consonant with reason and justice that a principal should not be allowed to profit by the fraud of his agent; and if he adopts the contract made in his behalf, although ignorant of the fraud, he should be held liable to make compensation to *562
the party injured by it. (Sandford v. Handy, 23 Wend. 260;Griswold v. Haven,
In accordance with these views there should be a new trial.
The judgments of the courts below should, therefore, be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to abide the event.
All concur.
Judgment reversed and new trial ordered.