17 Mo. 338 | Mo. | 1852
delivered the opinion o£ the court.
This was an action of trover for lumber, begun by Taylor against Labea’ume, in.the St. Louis Circuit Court, in November, 1848. There was a verdict and judgment thereon for the defendant.
In the year 1848, a company, composed of members residing in the east, was carrying on the business of cutting and Sawing lumber at St. Croix falls, in Wisconsin. Hamlet H. Perkins was the agent for the company, the members of which Were absent, and he carried on the business for them with as ample powers as though he had been a member. In the summer of 1848, the company became in arrears to the workmen employed in their business, and they becoming Very impatient for their pay, Perkins agreed with the plaintiff that he should take down to St. Louis a raft of 400,000 feet of lumber and with the proceeds satisfy the demands of the laborers, first paying the expenses of taking it to market. A bill of sale Was made to the plaintiff for the lumber on the 27th of July, 1848, and he hired McPhail and Whiting to take it to St. Louis, and it was delivered to them for that purpose. Taylor was requested to go to Mr. Greene, of St. Louis, who had been interested for the company, and if he would pay the amount for which the lumber was sold at St. Croix, and all the the expenses incurred in taking it to St. Louis, it was to be delivered to him. After the lumber was brought to St. Louis, it was taken by the defendant by virtue of a process at the suit of the creditors of the company.
The defendant produced the testimony of I. T. Greene, mentioned above, who deposed that, in July, 1848, he was at St. Croix with Robert Rantoul, who was acting president of the company; that previous to that, the mills had been carried on by Hamlet H. Perkins and others, as lessees of the company; that on the occasion referred to, a settlement took place between the company and lessees, and all the lumber then on hand, including that in controversy, was turned over by the. lessees to the company; that Perkins was made agent for'the
On cross-examination, Greene stated that no formal delivery of the lumber was made'by'Rantoul to him at St.'Croix, but he understood that he was to take it under' his 'agreement.
The payments made to McPhail and Whiting, for rafting the lumber to St. Louis, were by the plaintiff, and they gave him a receipt for the lumber, with an undertaking to deliver it to Mm at that place. The powers of "Perkins, as agent in the
The court gaye the following instructions for the defendant:
1. If the jury believe from the evidence, that the transfer of this lumber by Perkins to Taylor was, that he should take the same to niarket, sell it, and out of the proceeds pay the enumerated debts, expenses of running it to St. Louis and the like, and the surplus, if any, should be paid to the company, then the transaction was a transfer in trust to pay debts, &c., and not an absolute sale; and if the jury find that it was a transfer in trust, such as aforesaid, then, unless the plaintiff prove to the jury that Perkins was empowered and had authority from the St. Croix falls company to make such a transfer of this lumber, they ought to find for the defendant.
2. Every person dealing with an agent is bound to know his powers, and all acts of an agent, not authorized by his powers, are invalid and do not bind his principal. If, therefore, the jury believe from the evidence, that Perkins had not the authority, as agent of the St. Croix falls company, to transfer this lumber to Taylor, as Taylor, in this suit, claims that he did, then they ought to find for the defendant.
3. If the jury should believe from the evidence, that the transfer to Taylor was an authorized act, and that it was in trust to sell, and with the money pay certain debts and expenses, and the balance, if any, to belong to the St. Croix falls lumber company, and that all such debts and expenses that have been proved have been paici. out of the proceeds of said lumber or other means of the company, then they should allow the plaintiff only nominal damages; but if any remains unpaid, then they should allow the plaintiff the amount thereof.
4. If the jury find from the evidence that, prior to the giving of the bill of sale offered in evidence by the plaintiff, the St. Croix falls company had, by one of their members, delivered the lumber described in it to Isaac T. Greene, and that Greene had already removed the lumber from the falls, and had it in charge of persons hired by him, said 'Greene; then, as to
And the court also gave the following instructions for the plaintiff:
1. If the jury find that the bill of sale, under wbicb the plaintiff claims, was made by Perkins, while agent of the St. Croix company, with general authority to manage the business of the company, to hire and pay laborers, and that said sale was made in good faith to pay the wages of laborers, then said sale was effectual to pass the title of the lumber to the plaintiff.
2. If Perkins was the general agent of the St. Croix company, as mentioned in plaintiff’s, first instruction, be would have, as such agent, authority to transfer the lumber in trust as mentioned in the first instruction given for the defendant.
There is no legal evidence before the jury that said sale was procured by duress on the part of the laborers.
Tbe court refused these two instructions, asked for plaintiff:
1. Tbe written agreements between Greene and Rantoul gave no property to Greene in tbe lumber therein mentioned, go as to prevent a sale thereof by tbe company or its authorized agent.
2. If Perkins was acting as a general agent and as a lessee of tbe mills from May, 1847, to July, 1848, and during that time bad authority to make sucb a transfer as that on which tbe plaintiff relies, no private arrangement by which Perkins’ authority was limited, would affect tbe plaintiff, if tbe parties whom be represented accepted tbe transfer in good faith, and without any knowledge or notice of tbe limitation upon Perkins’ authority.
Exceptions were taken to the giving and refusing of instructions.
We regard Perkins as possessed of all the powers of an owner, in managing the mill. Good faith was all that could be exacted of him. There is no pretence that he did not act in a manner conducive to the best interests of the'company. ' The 'sale of lumber he made to the plaintiff,'was required by the unpaid laborers employed at the mills, who, it seems, had confidence in him that he would pay them; and but for this act, there must have been'a total suspension of all operations, to the great detriment of the owners.
The fourth instruction given for the defendant presented but a partial statement of the facts of the case, and was calcula