Sparkman v. W. T. Rawleigh Medical Co.

222 P. 1014 | Okla. | 1923

The W.T. Rawleigh Company is a manufacturer and general vendor of patent medicines and kindred products through its agents. About September 19, 1919, the plaintiff entered into a written contract with T.L. Sparkman as its agent for the sale of its patent medicines and products in a house to house canvas through the rural districts. The ordinary and usual manner of making such sales is for the agent to take a small quantity of the plaintiff's products in a vehicle and make a trip through the rural districts in the sale of the merchandise, and replenish the supply from time to time as the demands for the same arise in the ordinary and usual course of the business. The contract provided, in substance: (1) That it should continue in effect until December 31, 1920; (2) the contract might be terminated at the will of the seller; (3) the kind and quantity of the products to be sold to the agent were optional with the seller; (4) the agent should pay cash for the products or by "installment payments satisfactory to the seller".

It will be observed that the contract fails to make the following provisions: (1) The quantity of medicine and kindred products to be sold by the agent: (2) no definite period of time for which the contract is to apply: (3) the manner and time of payment for the products by the agent.

In relation to those terms not covered by the contract the law will imply that principal in dealing therewith, with his agent, will use that degree of care for the protection *164 and preservation of his own property rights, that an ordinarily prudent man would apply in relation to his own business. In relation to the following matters, the provisions of the contract left the following to be determined and fixed by the plaintiff: (1) The quantity of products that would be sold and delivered to its agent in the course of the latter's performance of his duties for the principal; (2) the extent of credit that the seller would grant his agent in the course of his business. In relation to these matters the law implies that the plaintiff would ship that quantity of its patent medicines and kindred products to its agent in the commencement of the performance of his duties, which would be reasonably required to enable the commencement of his services; (2) that the principal would exercise that degree of care that an ordinarily prudent man would exercise in relation to his own property interests in fixing and granting the line of credit required in the agent's conduct of the business. The agent executed his bond conditioned for the faithful performance of his duties under the express and implied provisions of the contract, and J.W. Cates, L.A. Howell, and J.P. Duncan became sureties thereon. The liability of the sureties in fixed by the express and implied provisions of the contract. Beyond the scope of such provisions, the sureties are not bound. The contract continued in force until about September 1, 1920, at which time an indebtedness of $822.87 had accrued in favor of the principal. The plaintiff then terminated the contract and commenced its suit against the agent and sureties for the amount of the indebtedness then owing. In the trial of the cause the court instructed a verdict in favor of the plaintiff and against the principal and sureties on the bond for the sum sued for, over the objection and exception of the defendants. The defendants then appealed the cause to this court and among the several errors assigned as grounds for reversal is, that the trial court committed error in its instructed verdict in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendants. In the course of the trial one of the officers of the plaintiff company testified in part as follows:

Q. "State whether or not the plaintiff company sold goods and charged them to the account of the defendant T.L. Sparkman, relying upon the guaranty signed by the defendants, T.W. Cates. L.O. Howell, and J.P. Duncan? A. We did, Mr. Sparkman was not strong financially from our investigation, and we, of course, would not have sold him this amount of goods on time without security. We believed that the defendants, J.W. Cates, L.O. Howell, and J.P. Duncan, were financially responsible and our investigation led us to believe that they were honest and would pay their debts, and relying upon this, we sold Sparkman goods on time."

The witness testified that he made an investigation of the financial ability of its agent to pay and did not find it good. The witness further testified that the company made an investigation of the responsibility of the sureties, and were led to believe that they were honest and would pay their debts, and in fact relied upon the sureties for the payment of the medicine and kindred products shipped to its agent. It is apparent from the record that the medicine company in the relations with its agent proceeded on the theory that under the terms of the contract it might sell any quantity of products to its agent without regard to the needs of the agent in the conduct of the principal's business, and without regard to the nature of credit extended the agent, and at such time as it elected, terminate the contract and hold the sureties for any unpaid balances. The sureties are only bound for the obligation of the plaintiff's agent arising within the scope of the express and implied provisions of the contract. Dolese Bros. Co. v. Chaney and Richard, 44 Okla. 745, 145 P. 1119. The plaintiff has attached a copy of the account which shows the first item charged to the agent in the sum of $716.20, on September 22, 1919. On November 10th, the, agent is credited by a remittance of $35, and on the 15th day of November there is a charge item of $82.30. Then following are similar credits, and on December 8th, the agent is charged with another shipment of goods in the sum of $116.40. The sales to the agent are very disproportionate to the remittances received from the agent, when considered in the light of plaintiff's testimony that it did not consider the agent financially responsible. An implied obligation under the contract rested on plaintiff to provide its agent in the commencement of his business for the principal only such products as were reasonably required in the ordinary needs of an itinerant vendor of such products, and to make such future provisions as the reasonable needs of the agent required. In extending credit to the agent, if the plaintiff so elected to do, under the obligations owing by the plaintiff to the sureties, it was the duty of the plaintiff to exercise that degree of care in granting a line of credit as would ordinarily be granted by a business person in the care of his own property rights. These matters are not covered by the express provisions of the contract and the law implies that the plaintiff *165 will use that degree of care and fairness towards its sureties, as it would expect at their hands. If the plaintiff granted credit to its agent in the first instance, and default in payment followed, and the agent made such remittances as would put the plaintiff on notice that the agent would not likely meet future payments, it was the duty of the medicine company to notify the sureties of such condition before making future, advancements. A breach in either or any of the foregoing conditions would relieve the sureties of liability on the bond. The liability of the sureties on the bond must arise within the express and implied provisions of the contract. The evidence in this case was sufficient to constitute a question of fact to go to the jury, and it was error therefore to instruct a verdict for the plaintiff. The record in this case brings it within the rules applied in the cases of Great Southern Life Insurance Co. v. John J. Long et al., 93 Okla. 129, 219 P. 926; Phoenix Insurance Co. of Hartford v. Newell, 60 Okla. 207,159 P. 1127; Chicago Crayon Co. v. Rogers, 30 Okla. 299, 119 P. 630; Guardian Fire and Life Assurance Co. v. Thompson et al. (Cal.) 9 P. 1. The cases cited apply the rule that where knowledge of embezzlement by the agent is brought home to the principal, it is the duty of the latter to notify the sureties on the bond, and a failure to so do after acquiring such knowledge, releases the sureties. This rule of law rests upon the supposition that a reasonably prudent business man in the conduct of his ordinary business affairs would not continue an agent in his employ after knowledge of the agent's embezzlement had come to his attention. The cases apply the principle that the employer cannot hold the sureties for loss which the employer might have discovered or avoided by that degree of care which a reasonably prudent business man applies in the conduct of his own business affairs. The plaintiff in this case, on the record, comes within the scope of the same principle. It is for the jury to say in this case whether an ordinarily prudent business man in the protection of his own property rights would have continued Sparkman in its employ and extended to him the line of credit given. Such credit, if any, extended beyond the scope of the exercise of such care, is not the liability of the sureties.

The conclusion reached in this case follows from the nature of the business, the failure of the contract to cover certain provisions, the relation between the principal and agent, and the testimony of the officer of the company in relation to his knowledge of the agent's responsibility.

Therefore it is recommended that this cause be affirmed as to the agent, Sparkman, and reversed and remanded as to the defendants, J.W. Cates, L.O. Howell, and J.P. Duncan, sureties on the bond, for further proceedings in accord with the opinion expressed herein.

By the Court: It is so ordered.