84 Va. 246 | Va. | 1887
delivered the opinion ot the court.
This is a writ of error to a judgment of the corporation court of Danville, rendered on the twenty-second of January, 1887. The case is as follows: On the teiith day of December, 1880, the plaintiff in error executed a power of attorney to George D. Graveley, by which he constituted said Graveley his “ attorney in fact to affix his signature and seal, to the amount of twenty-five thousand dollars, as surety to any bond which C. H. Ingles, treasurer of Henry county, might thereafter be' required by the judge or court of said county to give for the faithful discharge of his duties as treasurer.” In December, 1880, soon afterwards, the county court of Henry received and accepted of said C. H. Ingles a bond for the faithful discharge of his duties as treasurer in the penalty of $40,000, and to this bond the said Graveley, by virtue of said power of attorney, as attorney in fact for him, affixed the signature and seal of the said plaintiff in error. In 1883 suit was instituted upon this bond against Ingles, and his sureties therein, upon his alleged default as treasurer, the plaintiff in error being included among his said sureties, in the circuit court of Henry, which action' was removed by order entered therein to the corporation court of the city of Danville, where judgment was'rendered on the said bond against the plaintiff in error and others. At the time this judgment was rendered, the plaintiff' was a non-resident of the State of Virginia; but subsequently the plaintiff in error having returned to the State of Virginia, and being informed of this judgment, filed liis petition in the said court, June 13, 1885, praying that the said judgment might be set aside as to him, he not having been served with process, and that the case wherein the said judgment had been rendered might be re-opened, and he be allowed to make his defense;
There are some minor exceptions, but the only exception material to be considered here is the error assigned in holding the plaintiff in error responsible under the bond of $40,000; the said Graveley being the special agent of the plaintiff in error to execute a bond in the amount of $25,000, and having-executed a bond in the penalty of $40,000. The principles of law governing the acts of special agents appear to be well settled. Mr. Story says that in the case of a special agency, if the agent-exceeds the special and limited authority conferred on him, the principal is not bound by his acts, but they become mere nullities, so far as he is concerned. Section 126, Story, Ag. That a special agent to do a particular • thing within a fixed and defined limit cannot bind his principal beyond the scope and limits of his authority, unless the principal hold the agent out in some form as his general agent, is well settled, as was said by a learned judge in the case of Hunt v. Chamberlain, 3 Halstead’s R., 338. This judgment is at variance with that fixed principle or maxim of the common law, that delegated powers must be strictly pursued; they can never be enlarged
It was said by Hosmer, C. J., in Thompson v. Stewart, supra: “ The point is too clear for argument. It is no less extravagant to assert that an agent may enlarge his authority than that he can originate it.” The case of McCaraher v. Com., 5 Watts & S. 21, cited by the defendant in error, is not a case in point. That was a case in which a bond was duly executed in a penalty greater than the statute required. There the bond was held not binding beyond the amount required by law; that is, the obligor, having promised in a certain event to pay more, was entertained to deny his obligation to pay less under the bond than the full amount. There is no analogy. There was a completely executed contract, and the question on it at point was as to the measure of its enforcement. U. S. v. Howell, 4 Wash., C. C. 620; Com. v. Laub, 1 Watts & S., 263; U. S. v. Brown, Gilp. 155; Clapp v. Guild, 8 Mass., 153. Here we have no bond at all by which the plaintiff is bound. His agent had
Judgment reversed.