One Tappan assigned to plaintiff his wages for certain months to be earned in the future as an employee of defendant. Before the wages so assigned were earned, plaintiff sent an agent to the office of defendant, in the city of St. Paul, to serve notice of the assignment on defendant. The agent was familiar with the arrangement of the office, and looked for defendant, and, not finding him in, called for the cashier, asked him if Tappan worked there, and gave him
The defendant had geheral charge of his business; kept general office hours at his general office; reserved to himself the employment, control, and discharge of his men; and the so-called “cashier” had limited authority to pay out money, only as directed by the fixed orders of defendant. The cashier had no supervision or general powers over the business of defendant, and the question of whether defendant then owed Tappan or should owe him in the future was not within his knowledge as cashier, or within the scope of his authority to find out or determine. Hence notice to him was not notice to defendant. This principle is illustrated in the following cases: Sandberg v. Palm, 53 Minn. 252, 54 N. W. 1109; Trentor v. Pothen, 46 Minn. 298, 49 N. W. 129; Tice v. Russell, 43 Minn. 66, 44 N. W. 886; Jefferson v. Leithauser, 60 Minn. 251, 62 N. W. 277.
Judgment affirmed.