123 Ga. 302 | Ga. | 1905
Suit on an open account was brought, in the county court of Stewart county, by the Cedar Hill Nursery and Orchard Company, for the use of J. W. Shadow, against Mrs. Lula Pinkston, and judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff. The defendant sued out a certiorari to the superior court, but it was overruled, and she excepted. The account sued on was for $30.70, the price of certain fruit trees, grape-vines, etc., which an agent of the plaintiff had sold to J. Gr. Pinkston, the husband of the defendant. She denied that she had ever had any dealings with the plaintiff in person or through any authorized agent, whereas the plaintiff contended she was liable as an undisclosed principal. The agent of the plaintiff testified substantially as follows: In his capacity as salesman he visited Mrs. Pinkston at her home and tried to sell her some roses, trees,
The mere fact that Mrs. Pinkston got the benefit of the purchase would not make her liable to the seller. Hightower v. Walker, 97 Ga. 748. Nor could she beheld accountable unless her husband acted as her agent in the transaction (Axson v. Belt, 103 Ga. 578), nor even then, if the fact of agency was known to the seller, and the seller extended credit to her agent, not to her. Civil Code, § 3025, Mitchell v. Printup, 68 Ga. 675; Miller v. Watt, 70 Ga. 385. A seller may, however, go directly upon an undisclosed principal (Civil Code, § 3024), provided the principal receives the benefit of the contract made with his agent. Miller v. Watt, supra; Mickleberry v. O’Neal, 98 Ga. 42. Agency may be shown by evidence no stronger than that adduced on the trial
In the petition for certiorari, complaint is made that the court admitted testimony of the agent which contradicted the terms of the written contract evidencing the sale to Pinkston. As the county judge states in his answer that no such objection was offered to the testimony on the trial of the case before him, we can not undertake to deal with this complaint.
Judgment affirmed.