16 F. 688 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Connecticut | 1883
The libelant has appealed from a decree of the dig. triet court dismissing the libel. The libel was filed to recover of the defendant the sum of $3,000 and interest, due upon a charter-party entered into between the libelant and the defendant, as quartermaster general of the state of Connecticut, for the hire of the libelants’ steamer.
The following facts are found:
An act of the general assembly of the state of Connecticut, passed in 1881, authorized the quartermaster general of the state to provide transportation for a regiment of the National Guard, to represent the state at the centennial celebration of the battle of°Yorktown, and appropriated $3,000 for that purpose. The act also directed the quartermaster general to provide for the transportation and expenses of the governor and his staff in attending the celebration.
Thereafter, the proper authorities of the state made arrangements to have the state represented at Yorktown. Upon consultation among the state officials and officers and men of the militia, it was concluded to visit Charleston, South Carolina, in connection with the celebration at Yorktown, and in order to provide for the extra expense of the excursion beyond the sum appropriated, the officers and men of the military organizations agreed to contribute a further sum of between $7,000 and $8,000. A committee of arrangements was appointed to consider the ways and means. Col. Barbour, as the representative of this committee, consulted with the quartermaster general. The latter thought he would be justified in expending from $1,500 to $2,000, under that provision of the act of the general assembly which authorized him to provide for the expenses of the governor and staff, in addition to the $3,000 specifically appropriated for the expenses of the National Guard. The quartermaster general favored the excursion. Thereafter, he and Col. Barbour took measures to negotiate at New York city the chartering of a steamer of libelant to convey the excursionists. The negotiations were eon-*690 eluded by Col. Barbour. He fully informed Mr. Quintard, tbe president of the libelant, of tbe situation, and the latter understood that tbe state had appropriated $3,000 for a representation at Torktown, and that the balance necessary for the trip would be raised by subscription. A charter-party was agreed upon, at the sum of $6,000 for the trip from Hew Haven or Hew London to Yorktown, thence to Charleston" and return. When the question arose as to who should sign the charter-party on behalf of the excursionists, Col. Barbour offered to sign it personally, or to procure the quartermaster general ' of the state to sign it. Mr. Quintard preferred to have it signed by the quartermaster general. Accordingly, the charter-party in suit was drawn up and forwarded to the defendant. It named the libelant as party of the first part, and “Brig. Gen. Alexander Harbison, quartermaster general, representing the state of Connecticut,” as party of the second part. It was returned by the defendant to libelant signed “ State of Connecticut, by Alexander Har-bison, Quartermaster General.” By its conditions the party of the second part was to pay $3,000 on signing, and $8,000 at the expiration of the voyage. The first $3,000 was paid by the defendant. The second $3,000 was not paid, qnd is due to the libelant, with interest.
The excursionists found the trip by steamer to Charleston disagreeable, and the officers in command turned over the steamer at that port to the owners, and brought home the expedition by railroad, the defendant paying the expenses of transportation. The defendant received, in addition to the appropriation of $3,000 by the act of the general assembly, $2,000 from the funds of the state for the expenses of the governor and his staff, and $4,875 from moneys' paid by the officers and men, making in all $9,875. He paid out $3,000, the down payment on the charter-party, and the balance he paid out for the expenses of the trip.
Tbe case turns upon the application of tbe principles of tbe law of agency. Several general propositions bearing upon tbe facts are relied upon for tbe defendant, and are well established. A public officer who does not interpose bis own credit is not liable on a contract executed by him on behalf of tbe state, even in cases where be might have been liable had he represented a private individual; but where it is sought to charge him with a personal responsibility, the facts and circumstances ought to be such as to show clearly that both parties acted upon the assumption that a personal liability was intended. Gill v. Brown, 12 Johns. 385; King v. Butler, 15 Johns. 281; Murray v. Kennedy, 15 La. Ann. 385; Parks v. Ross, 11 How. 362; Sanborn v. Neal, 4 Minn. 126, (Gil. 83.) Nor is he personally liable upon a contract made by him ostensibly' for his principal, when he had no authority to make the contract if his want of authority was known to the other party. Newman v. Sylvester, 42 Ind. 106; Murray v. Carothers, 1 Metc. (Ky.) 71; Curtis v. U. S. 2 Nott & H. 144;
While these general rules are applicable here, they are not , decisive. The defendant was a public officer, and executed a contract ostensibly in behalf of the state of Connecticut. It was known, both as matter of law and matter of fact, to both parties that he had no authority to enter into such a contract in behalf of the state. Without more, it would be decided unhesitatingly that he could not be hold personally. He was authorized by the act of the general assembly to transport and maintain, for the purposes of the celebration at Yorktown, the body of persons who were selected to represent the state, and to expend $3,000, and such further sum as might be necessary, for the expenses of the governor and his staff, but he had no authority, as quartermaster general of the state, to pledge the responsibility of the state for the purposes of an excursion to Charleston. As his authority was conferred by a public law, the libelant, equally with the defendant, was chargeable with knowledge of his want of authority to make the charter-party in suit.
But, at the time the charter-party was entered into, the defendant sustained other relations towards the transaction than those existing by virtue of his official character. He was the representative of a party of excursionists, and had a fund upon which he could rely for the payment of their expenses, and this was known to the president of the libelant. As is stated by the learned district judge, “he hired the vessel, not because he was acting in that regard for the state, but because he was acting in behalf of a party of excursionists. ” If this is correct he was the real principal, because there was no other real principal. A body of persons who convened, as Chief Justice Gibson expresses it, “at an ephemeral meeting for a particular occasion,” could not be the principal. Eichbaum v. Irons, 6 Watts. & S. 67.
In order to charge the real principal it is always competent, in whatever form a parol written contract is executed by an agent, to ascertain by evidence dehors the instrument who is the principal; whether it purports to be the contract of an agent, or is made in the name of the agent as principal. Higgins v. Senior, 8 Mees. & W. 834; Trueman v. Loder, 11 Adol. & E. 594; Dykers v. Townsend, 24
“We are of opinion that the plaintiffs’ knowledge does not make their case any weaker than it would have been without such knowledge. We cannot reopen the rule that a party not mentioned in a simple contract.in writing may be charged as a principal upon oral evidence, even when the writing gives no signification of an intent to bind any other person than the signer. That rule is as well settled as any part of the law of agency.”
If the defendant was the real principal he cannot escape liability merely because he assumed to contract as an agent for another. The case, therefore, resolves itself into the question whether the libelant intended, notwithstanding, to rely upon the responsibility of some other party and absolve the defendant. The learned district judge was of the opinion that Mr. Quintard did not intend to rely upon the personal liability of the defendant, but although he knew that the state could not be held upon the contract, and that the defendant was only acting in behalf of a party of excursionists, preferred that the contract should be in the name of the state, and elected to discharge the defendant from liability. But does it follow that by taking the contract in the form in which it was expressed and executed he intended to absolve the defendant from personal liability ? He intended, undoubtedly, to have a contract to which there should be an obligated party of the second part. This must be assumed from the fact that he required a formal contract to be executed. “It is always presumed that persons intend effectually to do that which they contract, and when there is a conflict of constructions the parties are presumed to adopt the construction most favorable to the preformance of their engagements. Therefore, when the only way of enforcing a contract entered into by an agent is by making him liable, his liability will be assumed, provided it does not appear that it was intended in the transaction that he should not be liable.” Whart. Ag. § 523. This principle has been extended to contracts made by public officers when the contracts made by them in their official character were not obligatory upon their principals.'
In Kelner v. Baxter, L. R. 2 C. P. 174, a contract was made by the defendants in writing “on behalf of the Gravesend Royal Alexandra Hotel Company, ” and was signed in that way. The company was a projected company not then organized, and both parties knowing the fact that there was no principal in existence capable of being bound by the contract, it was held that defendants should be presumed to have contracted personally.
It seems difficult to maintain that a party who has a right to treat another as a principal, and hold him responsible as such, manifests an election to absolve him from liability by accepting the obligation of a third party which is known to be destitute of validity. This proposition must be maintained, or the libelant is entitled to recover. The defendant was the real principal, as between the libelant and the excursionists, because there is no pretense that the libelant relied upon the credit of the excursionists, and the defendant assumed to control a fund to meet their engagements. Botli the libelant and the defendant contemplated that there should be a formal obligation upon which the libelant could rely for its protection. The obligation entered into was one which both parties knew was inoperative if it was to be construed as the contract of the state. Unless they intended to regard it as the personal contract of the defendant, it was a futile and nugatory form. Neither upon legal presumption nor in
It is not to be overlooked that in the body of the charter-party the state is not made the party of the second part, but the party named is Brig. G-ep. Alexander Harbison, representing the state of Connecticut. As he was the real principal in the hiring of the vessel, there is no difficulty in treating his official designation as mere words of description. Beading the description in the body of the charter-party and in the signature as conflicting, and applying the rule adverted- to, which requires a construction of the instrument that will give efficacy to the engagements of the parties, even though it will result in charging a party as principal who has described himself as acting only in a representative capacity, this contract should be deemed the contract of the defendant individually.
In view of all the facts, the conclusion is reached that the defendant was the real principal who contracted with the complainant; that effect can be given to the charter-party only by treating it as the contract of the defendant personally; and that there was no election on the part of the libelant to absolve him from liability.
The decree of the district court is reversed, and a decree ordered for the libelant for $3,000, with interest from October 28,1881, with costs in the district court and upon this appeal.
In the leading case of Smout v. Ilbery,
The law of this case has been doubted by Mr. Parsons, in his work on Contracts,
Another class of cases in which the agent is personally liable is where he enters into the contract in his own name, or voluntarily incurs a personal liability, either express or implied.
In the principal case the charter-party purported to be entered into between the libelant, of the first part, and Brig. Gen. Alexander Ilarbison, quartermaster general, representing the state of Connecticut, of the second part, and was signed, “Yew York & CharlestonSfcoam-ship Co.; G. W. Quintard, Pres.,” and “State of Connecticut, by Alexander Ilarbison, Quartermaster General.” The state is not in the body of the instrument made a party to the contract. It ■does not appear from the case whether the instrument was sealed or not; but assuming, as was probably the case, that it was not under seal, “in order to be
There is another class of cases where a person purporting to act as agent is generally held to be personally liable,-namely, where he is inreality the principal, or where there is no responsible principal.
Where there is in reality no principal at the time of making the contract, the pretended agent is of course liable.
In the principal ease there would seem to be no doubt that the defendant acted for an irresponsible principal, and the controlling question in the case was: “To whom was the credit knowingly given, according to the understanding of both parties?” We do not understand that the learned judges who successively decided the case differed upon the law of the ease, but only upon this
Union College of Law, Chicago, June 13,1883.
10 M. & W. 1.
Vol. 1, p. 67, note.
See Story, Ag. § 264, note; Pollock, Cont. *236; 2 Smith, Lead. Cas. (7th Am. Ed.) *367; Evans, Ag. *300. See, also, Big. Lead. Cas. Torts, 21,22.
See Evans, Ag. *304; Story, Ag § 269, and cases cited.
Evans, Ag. *207; Lennard v. Robinson, 5 E. & B. 125; Deslandes v. Gregory, 29 L. J. Q. B. 93.
Sheets v. Selden, 2 Wall. 177; Stinchfield v. Little, 1 Greenl. 231; City of Providence v. Miller, 11 R. I. 272; Hodgson v. Dexter, 1 Cranch, 335; Walker v. Swartwout, 12 Johns. 444; State v. McCauley, 15 Cal. 456; Freeman v. Otis, 9 Mass. 272.
Sheffield v. Watson, 3 Cai. 99; Gill v. Brown, 12 Johns. 385; Horsley v. Bell, 1 Bro. C. C. 101, note; City of Providence v. Miller, supra.
Story, Ag. § 280 et seq.; 2 Kent, Comm. 630.
Story, Ag. § 287, and cases cited.
Story, Ag. § 288.
Kelner v. Baxter, L. R. 2 C. P. 174.
6 W. & S. 67.
59 Mo 193.
See, also, generally, Cruse v. Jones, 3 Lea, (Tenn.) 66; Devoss v. Gray, 22 Ohio St. 159; Evans, Ag. *28-31 and notes; Story, Ag. § 289 and notes.