14 Pa. Super. 134 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1900
Opinion by
The defendant, by an agreement in writing, authorized Booth & Crismyre, who are real estate agents, to sell a certain property in the borough of Ford City. The price at which the agents were authorized to sell, under the agreement, was $2,600, and the terms were cash. A further clause authorized the agents to sell, “according to the price and terms of payment above written, or any price or terms which I may authorize him to accept other than the above.” There was no evidence that the defendant had ever authorized the agents to sell upon any other terms. Crismyre, acting for his firm, effected a sale of the property to the plaintiff. At the time the negotiations were in progress there was in existence a policy of insurance, in the sum of $500, upon the interest of Naj^smith, the defendant, in the property. The equitable title was in Naysmith, but he had not paid the entire purchase money and the legal title was still held by the Pittsburg Plate Glass Company. The interest of the Pittsburg Plate Glass Company, being the balance of purchase money unpaid, was insured in a separate policy, in the sum of $600. A deed was duly executed and delivered to the plaintiff, who subsequently brought this action, claiming the right to recover upon the followiug grounds: She alleges that during the negotiations Crismyre, the agent, agreed that there should be transferred to her, without cost, a policy of insurance upon the property for $1,000, the premium on which had been paid for three years from the 1st day of April preceding. No policy in that amount was delivered to her, nor was any such policy in existence. This action was brought to recover the value of such a policy of insurance for the unexpired
As to the first question of fact there was abundant evidence to warrant its submission to the jury. The jury having found that fact, it is eliminated from our consideration. In order to recover, however, the burden was upon the plaintiff. In order to charge the defendant, to prove the authority under which the agent acted, to establish the agency and the extent thereof. It was not sufficient that the evidence established that the agent was in some capacity employed by the principal. It was incumbent upon the plaintiff to produce evidence sufficient to warrant the finding that the agent was authorized to represent the principal in the matter in controversy. This might have been done by showing the agent to have been authorized to represent the principal in all matters, or that he was specially delegated to represent the principal in the matter under investigation. There was no evidence of a general agency upon the part of Crismyre to represent the defendant. The only evidence of a delegation of authority in this case was the written agreement between the defendant and the real estate agents, which did not authorize the agents to make any agreement whatever touching the subject of insurance. The agreement conveyed a simple authority to sell a certain piece of real estate for cash, at a fixed price. In the case, as presented to the court, there was not a scintilla of evidence upon which to base a finding that the defendant had authorized his agents to make any contract with regard to insurance. The plaintiff relies upon the naked fact that the agent did make a contract. The authority to bind a principal cannot be proven by the declarations of the alleged agent, nor by his acts done without the knowledge or authority of the principal: Hays v. Lynn, 7 Watts, 524; Whiting & Company v. Lake, 91 Pa. 349; Moore v. Patterson, 28 Pa. 505; Telephone Company v. Thompson, 112 Pa. 118; Beal v.
Judgment reversed and venire facias de novo awarded.