180 Mo. App. 220 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1914
Plaintiff sued to recover damages he sustained from a breach by defendant of a written contract to exchange a stock of merchandise for a farm owned by plaintiff. Defendant claims he did not sign the contract nor authorize anyone to sign it for him. A trial by jury resulted in a verdict and judgment for plaintiff and defendant appealed.
Defendant and Gaylord testified that the latter had no authority to sell or exchange the goods; that the extent of this authority was to find a person who would trade land for the stock on terms acceptable to defendant and that as soon as defendant was informed of what had been done, he repudiated the acts of his agent and did nothing in ratification of them. The evidence, as a whole, presents a substantial controversy over the issues of the authority of Gaylord to enter into the contract on behalf of defendant and of the issue of the subsequent ratification of the contract. These issues were submitted to the jury in appropriate instructions and being decided in favor of plaintiff we must assume that defendant had invested Gaylord with oral authority to trade the stock of goods for land and that defendant ratified the trade.
But it is argued that the contract was within the Statute of Frauds governing sales of real property which not only requires such contracts to be in writing and signed by the party to be charged therewith but provides that “no contract for the sale of lands made by an agent shall be binding upon the principal, unless such agent is authorized in writing to make said contract.” [Sec. 2783, Rev. Stat. 1909.]
It may be conceded, as argued by defendant, that “if a part of a contract is within the Statute of Frauds the whole is governed by it.” [Wolfskill v. Wells, 154 Mo. App. 302; Ins. Co. v. Bloomfield, 141 Mo. App. l. c. 421; Beckmann v. Mepham, 97 Mo. App. 161.] But we do not perceive any good reason for the view that the contract in question falls within the Statute of Frauds relating to sales of real property. The statute
The relation of defendant to the transaction was that of the vendee of the land and the vendor of the merchandise. If in signing his name to the contract Gaylord was acting within the scope of oral instructions from him, the contract is neither void nor voidable since an agency for the sale of personal property may be created orally as well as by a writing signed by the principal. [Sec. 2784, Rev. Stat. 1909.] Before the amendment of section 2783 in 1887 an agent’s authority to sell the lands of his principál was not required to be in writing (Johnson v. McGruder, 15 Mo. 365; Riley v. Minor, 29 Mo. 439; Johnson v. Fecht, 185 Mo. l. c. 342; Beheret v. Myers, 240 Mo. l. c. 84), and that amendment applied only to sales of land and not to sales of personalty.
The jury were entitled to infer that Gaylord was acting under instructions from defendant in signing the contract and under such hypothesis the contract cannot be said to come within the Statute of Frauds. And further, to bind defendant on the ground of a subsequent ratification of an unauthorized contract made by his agent, plaintiff was not required to show a ratification in writing. A ratification of an unauthorized sale of land must be in writing signed by the owner. [Johnson v. Fecht, supra; Roth v. Georger, 118 Mo. 556; Hawkins v. McGroarty, 110 Mo. 546.] But that rule does not apply to a vendor of personal property. Under the facts and circumstances disclosed by the evidence we think the court did not err in submitting the issue of ratification to the jury. The point made by defendant against the description of the land