49 Iowa 166 | Iowa | 1878
Lead Opinion
The defendants contend that if the plaintiff did not purchase in the name of the defendants, he cannot now be heard to say that he purchased for them. The argument is that by not disclosing his agency he bought in his own name, and thereby exposed the property to the risk of being attached for his own debts; that in so doing he violated his contract of agency, if there was any, which implied that he was to purchase in the name of his principals, and that he thereby released his principals from the fulfillment of the contract upon their part.
The fallacy of the argument consists in assuming that the plaintiff was obligated to purchase in the name of his principals in the absence of instructions to that effect. Possibly the plaintiff could purchase to better advantage in his own name. If he was not instructed to the contrary it must be deemed to have been left to his discretion. The rights of a principal to property purchased for him by his agent are precisely the same whether the agency is disclosed or concealed.
As to the payment by plaintiff of his own money it is sufficient to say that he became liable to pay it because he did not disclose his principals,. Pie simply discharged that liability. He now claims to recover for the damage sustained by him by the non-fulfillment of the contract by the defendants. It will be observed that he is not seeking to recover for advances as such. If it were so it might be important to inquire whether the advances were officiously made (Story on Agency, § 336,), and whether the finding of the jury that defendants permitted the plaintiff to make the advances would preclude the idea that they were made by him officiously. But no such question arises in the case.
Finally, it is said that the evidence should have been such that the jury could determine that the plaintiff did not'know that the defendants were agents for Pinger & Go. The plaintiff, however, might have known that they were agents for Pinger & Co., yet if they employed the plaintiff to purchase
Reversed.
Rehearing
ON REHEARING.
It is now shown that, since our opinion was filed, the court-below, upon a motion of defendants, has corrected its record so as to accord with the facts as claimed by defendants, and this corrected record is brought before us as the record of this-case. The plaintiff moves in this case for a continuance on the ground that he has appealed from the order of the court-below correcting the record, and his appeal is now pending and will be submitted to us at the next term held at Council Bluffs. If we are to act upon the amended record this application would seem to be based upon reason, for we might, upon the appeal involving the action of the court in correcting' the record, reverse that action and set it aside. In that-case, if we should reach a conclusion differing from the-decision announced in our first opinion, we would be under the necessity of changing back to our first ruling. In other-words, as- the record of the court below should be changed, our decisions must oscillate. This condition of things is-inconsistent with the law governing proceedings in this court, and the facts we have stated serve as a fit introduction to the-consideration of the question presented in the petition for-rehearing. That question is this: Will this court, after a-cause has been decided, permit, upon a petition of rehearing, the record to be changed and thus authorize new questions to-be introduced in the case ?
The parties by submitting the case upon the record admitted its correctness. The questions determined in our opinion,, and no other or different, were involved in the.record. It is-not claimed that our decision upon these questions is incor
The hardship of the particular case is no ground for granting relief to defendants by permitting them to present a new case to us upon rehearing. If they have no relief it is chargeable to the negligent management of their case.
It may be, but the point we do not decide, that our decision upon the record which was before us will not be in the way of a judgment in the court below in accord with the amended or new record.
We discover no grounds upon which our decision can be disturbed; we, therefore, adhere to it.