Shoninger v. Peabody

59 Conn. 588 | Conn. | 1890

Carpenter, J.

When the original case was before this court, (57 Conn., 42,) the question was not, whether the piano was sold to the defendant, but what were the terms of the sale ? The sale was admitted. The pleadings raised no question as to the terms of sale. That question arose upon the evidence. The plaintiffs’ agent, who sold the piano, testified that payment was to be made in commissions to be earned by the defendant as a broker in the business of the agent. It appeared that the defendant paid $75 in cash, that he earned commissions on the agent’s account amounting to $185, and that there was $40 of the purchase price still due. The defendant testified that the commissions were not applied in payment, but that the payments were in fact made in money. If the defendant was right, then he should have been credited with the further sum of $185. If the testimony of the agent was true, and that sum was not paid in cash, but in commissions, the plaintiffs would not be bound by such payments unless they had ratified the contract as to the mode of payment.

The trial court disallowed said sum of $185. In doing so the judge must have believed the testimony of the agent, *593and found that he agreed to take pay in commissions earned on his private account. It further appeared that the plaintiffs had full knowledge of this agreement before they brought the suit. This court held that the court erred in disallowing the sum of $185, on the ground that bringing the suit with knowledge affirmed not only the sale but the terms of the sale; that they could not affirm the sale and disaffirm the terms, affirm in part and disaffirm in part.

When that judgment was reversed, the proper thing for the lower court to have done, as it now seems to us, was to allow the $185 and render judgment for the plaintiff for the balance. Then, if there had been no tender, the plaintiffs would have recovered full costs; if there was a tender the defendant would have had judgment for costs.

The precise nature of the judgment rendered by the district court does not appear. The complaint for a new trial alleges in general terms that judgment was rendered for the defendant. The finding is silent on that subject. Whatever may have been the form of the judgment, it is quite clear that the plaintiffs took nothing by their suit; for it is distinctly found “ that the defendant now refuses to allow the tender of $40 allowed in his answer in the original complaint, or to pay or allow the plaintiffs the benefit of the same in said action or in the judgment thereon.”

As the record then stood, even, the judgment for the defendant has the appearance of being unjust. It being a suit to recover the admitted balance of the purchase money, we can conceive of no possible defense to it.

It is contended in behalf of the defendant that the plaintiffs, by continuing to prosecute their suit after they had knowledge of the testimony of the agent as to the terms of the sale, thereby ratified the sale on those terms. Even if that be so, the fact still remains that the plaintiffs have been deprived of the balance of the purchase money to which they are clearly entitled. In reply to this it may be said that whatever injustice has been done, was done by the judgment; that this is an application to open that judgment for one specified reason; and that the court will not grant a *594new trial on one ground that has been asked for on another. That is doubtless true ; nevertheless, the question whether justice requires it is necessarily involved in every application for a new trial. And it is also true that the court must be able to see that it is probable that injustice, if any has been done, will be remedied on another trial. If there has been no ratification, the plaintiffs may fairly claim that they should not be charged with the commissions. In that event the first judgment in their favor was right. If the fact which appeared in that record, and from which a rati•fieation was inferred, now disappears, it is clear that the plaintiffs are entitled to a new trial, unless there is some other fact in the ease from which a ratification ought to be inferred. That brings us to the question whether it ought to be inferred from the fact that the plaintiffs prosecuted their suit after the information they received.

Knowledge of a fact is one thing; knowledge that one man claims the fact to exist, and another denies it, is another. The two things may be followed by very different legal consequences. The law subjects parties to the consequences of existing facts, whether known to them at the time or not. When a party has absolute knowledge of a fact, such knowledge may affect some right, or charge him with certain legal consequences; but as a matter of law will such consequences result from anything short of actual knowledge ? Will the mere knowledge that one man asserts a thing and another denies it, be sufficient? Will it charge him with a knowledge of the alleged fact? If so, will it not with equal propriety charge him with knowledge of its non-existence? Will the law be so absurd ? The law may well hold parties responsible for facts when those facts have been judicially determined. Mistakes will sometimes occur in ascertaining such facts, and thereby injustice may sometimes result. That is unavoidable. But will the law impute knowledge to a man, and thereon found a liability, in a case where it is impossible for him to know? The law requires an impossibility of no man.

But the question does not necessarily arise here. The *595suggestion assumes what may not be true—that there was such an agreement as the agent swears to. It may be that when that matter is properly put in issue by the pleadings, it will be determined that there was no such agreement; that the commissions were actually paid to the defendant in cash, and that the items in the defendant’s bill of particulars were paid in money. In that event the .question of ratification is eliminated from the case.

But the agreement, under the pleadings as they now stand, is only important as it bears upon the question whether the defendant’s charges should be allowed or disallowed. If cash was charged, and not commissions, then the agreement is immaterial. If commissions were charged, and there was such an agreement, then the question arises—are the plaintiffs bound by that agreement? Even then, it will be observed, its effect is limited to the question of allowing or rejecting the defendant’s charges. It cannot have the effect, as counsel seem to assume, to defeat the action. The plaintiffs sued on a contract; the answer admits a contract; and neither party pleads a special agreement, or claims one, except for the one purpose above named.

To return to the question—can the plaintiffs repudiate Bay’s agreement to take pay in commissions, and thereby defeat the defendant’s charges? That question has not been decided, nor has it been discussed except incidentally, and we will not anticipate it. That question, and the question whether the plaintiffs are entitled to the amount tendered, have not been decided. As the case now stands there has been a practical denial of justice.

We do not assent to the proposition of the defendant, that “ if a new trial were granted the plaintiffs would be obliged to discontinue their present action, restore to the defendant the money actually paid by him to the agent Day on account of the piano, and then bring an action of trover or replevin.” If we did we should hesitate to advise a new trial for that purpose. If the present judgment would be a bar to another action, possibly that course would be allowable.

*596In this case the plaintiffs may elect to stand upon the contract, whatever it may finally be determined to be. If so, their failure to rescind and restore to the defendant the money paid, does not stand in the way of granting a new trial.

The defendant however interposes another objection, namely, “that the plaintiffs could have recovered only on the contract set forth in their complaint. They were not entitled to recover on the allegations of the defendant.”

This objection cannot avail. This is an action with the common counts only, to recover the consideration of a contract fully executed by the plaintiffs, and not an action upon a special contract. So far as the terms of the contract are in dispute, they do not relate to performance by the plaintiffs, but solely to the mode and terms of payment. They cannot defeat the plaintiffs’ right to maintain the suit, although they may affect the amount to be recovered.

Our conclusion is that upon the amended record the judgment against the plaintiffs is manifestly unjust, and that probably the result of another trial would be different. We therefore advise a new trial.

In this opinion the other judges concurred.