35 S.C. 572 | S.C. | 1892
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was an action to recover the value of certain lumber and timber alleged to have been delivered by the plaintiffs to the defendants. Tho complaint set forth two causes of action — one upon a special contract in writing, and the other upon an implied contract tó pay what said lumber and timber, alleged to have been delivered by plaintiffs to defendants, was reasonably worth. It' appears that the written contract, which is not under seal, a copy of which is incorporated in the complaint, purports, upon its face, to be a contract, not between the plaintiffs and the defendants, but between Neill C. Munroe, one of the plaintiffs, and the defendants, and it is signed “Williams & Turley” and “N. C. Munroe.” The plaintiffs in setting forth their firs't cause of action in the complaint, after alleging that Neill C. Munroe and Daniel II. Everett are and were co-partners, at the time of making said contract, under the name of Munroe & Everett, and that Frank Williams and Dudley Turley are now, and were at the time of making said contract, co-partners under the name of Williams & Turley, allege that “the
In their answer defendants set up several defences. First, a general denial of the allegations of the complaint, except such as are thereinafter specifically admitted, but admitting, in express terms, the co partnership between the defendants. Second, that plaintiffs failed to perform their part of the contract set forth in the complaint, and denying specifically any knowledge of the fact alleged by plaintiffs, that the plaintiff Munroe, in making said contract, was acting for Everett as well as himself, and denying that such was the case.
The plaintiffs, amongst other things, offered parol testimony, which was received without objection, tending to show that plaintiffs were co partners, and so known to be by the defendants; that they also knew that Munroe, in making the contract, was not acting for himself individually, but for the firm of Munroe & Everett; that defendants had repeatedly recognized Everett as one of the firm, and had offered to pay him his half of the amount due by them for lumber, and that plaintiffs had performed their part of the contract, and that defendants had several times promised to pay the amount of the account sued upon, but had failed to comply with any of their promises.
At the close of the testimony in behalf .of plaintiffs, a motion for a non-suit was made by defendants, whereupon plaintiffs moved to amend their complaint “by making suitable allegations to complete the second cause of action.” The motion to amend was-refused, and the non suit was granted in a short order, which does not disclose the grounds upon which the non-suit was granted. The grounds upon which the motion for non-suit was made, as well as the grounds upon which such motion was granted, not appearing in the “Case,” as prepared for argument here, we are compelled to gather them, as best we may, from the plaintiffs’ grounds of appeal, as set forth in the record, and from the addi
In Dupont v. Mount Pleasant Ferry Company, 9 Rich., at page 258, Withers, J., makes the following quotation from Story on Agency, section 160, which seems to be decisive of the question, to wit: “If the agent possesses due authority to make a written contract not under seal, and he makes it in his own name, whether he describes himself to be agent or not,'or whether the principal be known or unknown, he, the agent, will be liable to be sued and be entitled to sue thereon, and his principal also will be liable to be sued, and be entitled to sue thereon (italics ours), in all cases, unless, from the attendant circumstances, it is clearly manifested that an exclusive credit is given to the agent, and it is intended by both parties that no resort shall, in any event, be had by or against the principal upon it.” Judge Withers goes on to cite sections 394 and 395 of the same work, where, in the notes, numerous examples are given where the agent, as well as the principal, may sue. The same doctrine was plainly recognized by Mr. Justice McGowan in Harris v. Railroad Company, 31 S. C., 87, though the case is not precisely in point. Now, in this case there certainly was testimony tending to show that Munroe, in entering into the written contract with the defendants, was acting, not for himself individually, but as agent for the plaintiffs, and that this was known to the defendants. If these facts were established to the satisfaction of the jury, then, under the above authorities, the plaintiffs could maintain this action, and there was, therefore, error in granting the non-suit upon the ground indicated above.
The judgment of this court is, that the judgment of the Circuit Court be reversed, and that the case be remanded to that court for a new trial.