160 N.C. 107 | N.C. | 1912
Plaintiff, a witness in support of bis demand, testified in effect as follows; That in November or December of 1907, a short while after the panic, he was an employee of defendant company, and in charge of a logging squad in connection with the plant of said company at Oriental, N; O. That the superintendent of defendant -plant at that place was one W. J. Moore, in general charge of same, having power to make contracts, employ and discharge hands, etc. That the general offices of the company were at Norfolk, Ya., the general superintendent of defendant lumbering business being one Harriss. and that the employees of defendant company were paid off monthly according to a pay-roll sent to the general offices. That on or about the date specified, November or December,
If it be conceded that the evidence was sufficient to establish the contract, and, further, that the reprehensible purpose to impose plaintiff on the court as an entirely disinterested witness when he was in fact an employee of the company was not sufficiently shown as an inducement to the contract on the part of plaintiff to vitiate it (Martin v. McMillan, 63 N. C., 486; Phillips v. Hooker, 62 N. C., 193), we are of opinion that the judgment of nonsuit has been properly rendered.
By virtue of his position, then, this superintendent had general power to do what was usual and necessary to carry on the business entrusted to him, and in furtherance of his employer’s interest to make all such contracts as were reasonable and appropriate to that end; but this authority is not without limitations. Such an officer is by no means a universal agent, but is restricted, as stated, to “those acts and contracts usually exercised by other agents in the same line of business under similar circumstances, and must 'conduct the particular business of the principal in the manner usually employed by other agents of the same kind.” 1 Clark and Skyles on the Law of Agency, sec. 203, p. 415.
Again, it is well recognized that a third person dealing with one known to be an agent is not relieved of all obligation in the matter, but is held to the exercise of reasonable prudence, and if an agent, though a general one, departing from legitimate effort in- his employer’s interests, tenders a contract so unusual and remarkable as to arouse the inquiry of a man of average business prudence, the third party is not allowed to act upon assumptions which ordinarily obtain; he' is put upon notice and must ascertain if actual authority has been conferred. 1 Clark and Skyles, p. 509; Mechem on Agency, secs. 289-290; 31 Oye., pp. 1340-6.
In 31 Cyc. it is said: “A general agent, unless he act under special and limited authority, impliedly has power to do whatever is usual and proper to effect such a purpose as is the subject of his employment. Hence, in the absence of known limitations, third persons dealing with such a general agent have a right to
And in Mechem, supra: “Third persons must act in good faith. It is evident that these rules are established for the protection of third persons who act in good faith. As has been stated, every person dealing with an agent is bound to ascertain the nature aind extent of his authority. He must not trust to the mere presumption of authority nor to any mere assumption of authority by the agent. He must at all times be able to trace the authority'home to its source. Keeping within the scope of that authority, he is safe and-cannot be affected by secret instructions of which he was ignorant. But if he had knowledge of the instructions, or notice sufficient to put him upon an inquiry by which they might have been discovered, he will be held bound by them.” And further, sec. 290: “The person dealing with the agent must also act with ordinary prudence and reasonable diligence. If the character assumed by the agent is of such a suspicious or unreasonable nature, or if the authority which he seeks to exercise is of such an unusual or improbable character, as would suffice to put an ordinarily prudent man upon his guard, the party dealing with him may not shut his eyes to the real state of the case, but should either refuse to deal with the agent at all or should ascertain from the principal the true condition of affairs.”
In Williams v. Johnston, supra, Chief Justice Smith, delivering the opinion, said: “An agency, however comprehensive in its scope, nothing else appearing, contemplates the exercise of the powers conferred for the benefit of the principal. It implies a trust and confidence that the delegated authority will be employed in the honest and faithful discharge of the duties appertaining to the fiduciary relation thus established.”
In Upton v. Suffolk Co. Mills it was held, “That a general selling agent has no authority to depart from the usual manner of accomplishing what he is employed to effect.”
In Friedman v. Kelly, supra, a well-reasoned ease and sustained by abundant authority, the Court held: “Where an agent, such as a traveling salesman, assumes, in the conduct of the sale of goods, authority which he did not in fact have and of such extraordinary character as would put a reasonably prudent man upon his inquiry, such party dealing with him cannot in that case hold his principal on the ground of apparent authority. Where a traveling salesman selling ladies’ cloaks for his principal agreed with a purchaser that he might retain the cloaks until after the season was over and then return such as were not satisfactory, this was an agreement so unusual and extraordinary that the purchaser should have taken notice that the agent had no authority to make it, and the purchaser could not claim the right to return the cloaks on the ground that the agreement was within the apparent scope of the agent’s authority, especially where the evidence showed that he knew the proposition was extraordinary.”
There is no error, and the judgment of nonsuit is
Affirmed.