42 Mo. App. 73 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1890
Plaintiffs are merchants at Bucklin, Missouri, on the line of defendant’s railroad, and sued the defendant railroad company for goods alleged to have been furnished the men engaged on a construction train. The claim is that plaintiff entered into an arrangement with one Whitaker, the foreman of the construction gang, whereby it was agreed, in effect, that plaintiffs should let the men have goods, each to the amount of
• The evidence clearly establishes a want of express authority in Whitaker to pledge the credit of the railroad company for supplies thus furnished these employes. But, from the tenor of instructions given, it would seem that plaintiffs rely on a supposed ratification of the unauthorized acts of this foreman in charge of the men. It was the uniform custom of the company, in matters'of this nature, where they had impecunious employes working on these trains, to permit the bosses to assist the grocery-dealers and boardinghouse keepers in subjecting the wages of the men to the payment of supplies bought, or board furnished, while working for the company. This was accomplished by the merchant or boarding-house 'keeper limiting the amount of supplies and board furnished by the amount of wages in each case due the employes, and at stated times furnishing the company with the. bills, and these would be paid (or collected) by the defendant deducting the respective sums from the wages due the men and turning it over to such merchants or boardinghouse keepers. With that in view the company supplied a blank form for such bills to which was annexed a certificate to be signed by the dealer, which, after certifying to the correctness of the bill, stated “that it is -in no sense a claim against the railway company, but is sent to C. S. Tuckerman of Chicago, with request that he will personally collect said amounts, and will at regular time pay over the amounts so collected to me.”
It will be thus seen that the company, at most, was in such cases only assuming to act as a collector for those having claims against such employes. This appears, beyond question, as the only arrangement which Whitaker, the construction-train foreman, was
*76 “2. That the unauthorized acts of an agent, when ratified by the principal, are equally binding as though embraced within the scope.of the agent’s original authority, and, in this case, if you find, from the evidence, that the defendant paid a part of plaintiffs’ bill without objection, with á full knowledge of its extent, then they will be held in law to have adopted the act of the agent contracting the same, even though he has no authority at first to contract for the same.” The giving of this instruction was clearly erroneous. The mere payment of the three hundred and seventy-five dollars, as a portion of the bill for five hundred and sixty-six dollars, did not, of itself, amount to a ratification of the unauthorized contract, alleged to have been entered into by Whitaker. Such payment, in order to constitute a ratification, must have been attended by something more than full knowledge of the “ extent, ’ ’ of the bill, but must have been accompanied by full knowledge of the terms of the engagement entered into by Whitaker. The company must have been fully informed that Whitaker had bought these goods and pledged the company’s credit for the same. The ratification of an act previously unauthorized must, in order to be binding, be made with a fuli knowledge of all the material facts. Windsor v. Bank, 18 Mo. App. 665 ;
It is clear, from this record, that none of the employes referred to in the evidence — neither Whitaker, Booker nor Kimble — had any authority to make the contract relied upon, and hence no knowledge on their part that such an arrangement was made could bind the company in the direction of a ratification. The judgment is for the wrong party, and must be reversed.