22 Barb. 611 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1856
The plaintiff failed entirely in establishing, by proof, the special count in his complaint. If he had made out such a contract as in that count alleged, he would probably have been entitled to recover. It has undoubtedly been established, by a great number of cases, that a person acting as a public agent may contract with an individual in such a manner as to make himself personally liable; but the facts and circumstances must, in stich cases, show the contract to be very special, and that the party gave the credit to, or performed the labor for, the individual alone, and on his promise and agreement to pay; or the fact of his being a public agent must be unknown, and must not be disclosed at the time of making the contract. The great inquiry in such cases is, to whom was the credit intended to be given. (Dunlap’s Paley on Agency, 376, 7, and notes. 1 Term R. 180. 2 Kent’s Com. 632. 3 Dallas, 384. 12 John. 385, .444. 15 id. 1. 19 id. 63. 7 Cowen, 451. 8 id. 191.) And even an express promise to pay is not always the criterion. But much depends upon the question whether the agent intended to make himself personally liable. (Walker v. Swartwout, 12 John. 444. 2 Wend. 375.) A very different rule prevails in regard to public agents from that which is applicable to those of a private character. Ordinarily, an agent contracting in behalf of the government or of the public, is not personally bound by such a contract, although he might be, perhaps, if it were an agency of a private character. The reason of the distinction, say the elementary writers, and the adjudged cases, is, “ that it is not to be presumed, either that the public agent intends to bind himself personally, in acting as a functionary of the goYJ
This has been the doctrine from the leading case of Macbeath v. Haldiman, (1 T. R. 172, 181,) followed as late as the case of Girley v. Lord Palmerston, (3 Brod. & Bing. 275,) in England, through a great variety of adjudications in our own country. (See Hodgson v. Dexter, 1 Cranch, 345 ; 1 Mass. Rep. 208; 9 id. 490 ; 6 id. 253; 3 Dallas, 384.) The cases of Macbeath v. Haldiman, and Hodgson v. Dexter, were recognized and followed by the supreme court of this state, in Walker v. Swartwout, (12 John. 444, 448,) virtually overruling the case of Sheffield v. Watson, (3 Caines, 69,) which has been pronounced more than once, “an extraordinary decision.” In the case just cited as overruling it, the defendant was quarter master general of the United States army, which arrived at French Mills, Franklin county, about the 20th November, 1813. He directed certain boatmen who were with the army (and the plaintiff among the rest) to go to work for the use of the army, and promised that they should each be allowed for their services $2 per day. The plaintiff worked, accordingly, about six weeks, when he applied to the defendant, who was about to leave French Mills, for a certificate as evidence of the contract, and of the time he had worked, and the defendant replied, “my word is sufficient,” and told the plaintiff to go to work, and he would pay him, when his work was done. The plaintiff continued to work under this assurance, for several weeks afterwards, when he was discharged without pay. He brought his action against the defendant, and a verdict was rendered in his favor, subject to the opinion of the supreme court, Thompson, Oh. J.,
I have quoted thus largely from this opinion, because it is
The same principle was again sanctioned in Rathbon v. Budlong, (15 John. 1,) and in Bronson v. Woolsey, (17 id. 46.) In the latter case the defendant, a captain in the United States navy, employed the plaintiff, with his vessel, to transport ordnance and stores on Lake Ontario, and finally caused it to be sunk in the lake near Oswego. It was decided that he was acting on behalf of the government, and could not be held personally responsible. So in the case of Olney v. Wickes, (18 John. 122,) the court said that “where a public agent acts ostensibly in the line of his official duty, his contracts are public and not personal.” See also 1 Cowen, 513 ; Fox v. Drake, (8 id. 191;) Belknap v. Reinhart, (2 Wend. 375,) in which a promise was made by the defendant to pay a certain reward for apprehending a deserter. See also Osborne v. Kerr, (12 Wend. 179,) which was an action'against a canal superintendent, and where the court placed their decision upon the ground that the case did not show that the defendant intended to bind himself personally. Also Chitty on Con. 8th Am. ed. 251, 2; Story on Agency, 388, § 302, &c.; Dunlap’s Paley, 376 to 379, and notes.
Now what are the facts, in this case, upon which the defendant relies, to distinguish it from those above cited. As already remarked, no express promise was proved, nor is any pretended. The plaintiff relies upon the implied undertaking on the part of the defendant, to hold himself individually responsible. The only evidence is, that the plaintiff being “about” the custom house after the defendant was appointed collector, acted voluntarily as a night watch and oarsman, or as a secret informer. He was directed by the defendant, in a few instances, to repair to particular points on the river, and he was found to be at the office almost every evening. In a word, he acted much as others did, about the office, who were in the sanie business; the de
C, L. Allen, Paige, James and Rosekrans, Justices.]