205 P. 235 | Mont. | 1922
delivered the opinion of the court.
This action was commenced and tried in the justice’s court of Great Falls township. The plaintiff recovered judgment for the amount asked. On appeal to the district court a jury was impaneled and sworn and the case was tried anew. At the close of the introduction of the evidence for both sides, the court, upon motion, directed a verdict in defendant’s favor and entered judgment thereon. A motion for -a new trial was denied, and this appeal was taken from the order.
In two counts the plaintiff alleges that he sold and delivered to the defendant lumber of the value of $182. The first count charges that J. W. Swope was agent for the defendant,
Counsel for plaintiff simplifies the issues by admitting that the plaintiff was unable to prove that the defendant gave Swope authority to act for him, insisting, however, that the evidence shows ratification by a subsequent promise to pay for the lumber, if he found that it had actually been delivered. He insists that the appeal is to be considered “from the standpoint of whether the court should have nonsuited the plaintiff,” and that in the determination of the case “every fact testified to by the plaintiff must be taken as true and conclusively establishing his contentions.” This limits the inquiry to the legal sufficiency of the evidence to show defendant’s acceptance of the lumber.
The proof necessary to establish ratification of unauthorized
This court, in Koerner v. Northern Pac. Ry. co., 56 Mont., on page 520, 186 Pac., on page 340, gave its latest interpretation of the above section as follows: “ ‘Ratification’ is defined to be the confirmation of a previous act done either by the party himself or by another. (23 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, 889; 33 Cyc. 1529.) And a confirmation necessarily supposes knowledge of the thing ratified. (Rev. Codes [1907], sec. 5425 [now section 7940] Weidenaar v. New York Life Ins. Co., 36
To sustain his contention that the case should have been submitted to the jury, counsel quotes from the opinion of this court in Carlson v. Stone-Ordean-Wells Co., 40 Mont. 434, 107 Pac. 419, the following: “In 1 Clark & Skyles on the Law of Agency, section 137, it is said: ‘As a general rule, a principal’s acts will be liberally construed in favor of a ratification.’ It is an essential element of ratification that the principal shall have full knowledge of all the material facts, unless he intentionally and deliberately ratifies when he knows that he has not such knowledge.” In that case the defendant, by its own admission, had for more than three years accepted and retained the benefits of a contract made by an unauthorized agent with full knowledge of all the material facts. Upon that ground the judgment was sustained.
Chief Justice Bigelow of the supreme court of Massachusetts, in Combs v. Scott, 12 Allen, on page 497, lays down the rule to be applied in the present ease, in this language: “Ratification of a past * * * transaction, into which an agent has entered without authority, is a purely voluntary act on the part of a principal. No legal obligation rests upon him to sanction or adopt it. No duty requires him to make inquiries concerning it. Where there is no legal obligation or duty to do an act, there can be no negligence in an omission to perform it. The true doctrine is well stated by a learned test-writer: ‘If I make a contract in the name of a person who has not given me an authority, he will be under no obligation to ratify it, nor will he be “bound to the performance of it.’ (1 Livermore on Agency, 44; see, also, Paley on Agency, 171,
The statement attributed to the defendant in the plaintiff’s
From the entire record it is apparent that the plaintiff was unable to show by competent evidence that the lumber was accepted by the defendant with the full knowledge contemplated by the statute, and that it falls within the class of evidence stamped by this court in Escallier v. Great Northern Ry. Co., 46 Mont. 238, Ann. Cas. 1914B, 468, 127 Pac. 458, as too unsubstantial to afford sufficient legal ground for its submission to the jury. Neither Swope nor Robertson had authority. to bind the defendant to pay for the lumber, for that would be to say that one man can bind another without his consent. Even if it could be said that both were at fault, the plaintiff, having failed to exercise the prudence demanded of a man in a like situation, was more blamable, and the law affords him no relief.
The order is affirmed.
'Affirmed.