68 W. Va. 332 | W. Va. | 1910
In tlie court below the verdict was for defendant, and the judgment overruling plaintiff’s motion to set aside the verdict and award it a new trial, was that it take nothing by its action, and' that defendant recover his costs. To test the correctness of this judgment plaintiff brings the case here on a writ of error.
Plaintiff, a corporation, at Uniontawn, Pennsylvania, claiming to have purchased from defendant, a packer at Berkeley Springs, this state, through the agency of one Shearman, a broker at Indianapolis, Indiana, a carload of canned tomatoes, and to be the assignee of similar contracts of other purchasers, through the same agency, of certain other carloads of that class of goods, brought this action against defendant to recover damages for alleged breaches of said contracts.
The only point of error relied on, or saved on the record,- is the action of the court denying the plaintiff’s motion to set aside the verdict of the jury and award it a new trial.
The controlling question is, had Shearman, the broker, authority; was he the duly authorized agent of Dawson to execute contracts of sale?- The position of plaintiff’s counsel is, that as the evidence is practically all documentary, letters and correspondence between Dawson and Shearman, not conflicting, but conclusive, or so preponderating in favor of plaintiff’s claim, the questions involved are questions of law for the court rather than for jury determination. It is conceded that Dawson never had any direct dealings either -with plaintiff or either of the other parties with whom Shearman made contracts in regard to the tomatoes.
The general, and salutary rule is, that where one deals with an agent he is bound at his peril to know his authority. If in ■writing he is presumed to have read his warrant of authority. Walls v. Life Ins. Co., 41 W. Va. 131; Cobb v. Glenn Boom & Lumber Co., 57 W. Va. 49; Rosendorf v. Poling, 48 W. Va. 621. And the principal is not, as a general rule, bound by the contracts of one' who assumes without authority to represent him as agent. 31 Cyc. 1567; Rosendorf v. Poling, supra.
To create the relationship of principal and broker there must be a contract of employment, express or implied. 19 Cyc. 190; 2 Clark & Skyles, Law of Agency, section 749. Like other agents the broker “derives his authority from the appointment of his principal, and in order to obtain rights himself, or establish liabilities to others, against his principal, the fact of his appointment, must be made to appear”, though no special method is requisite, and as in case of other agents the appointment may be made to appear by an instrument in writing, or by mere spoken words, or it may be presumed from the conduct of the parties. Mechern on Agency, section 937. Story on Agency, (8th Ed.) section 94, says: “Implied authority may be deduced from the nature and circumstances of the particular act done by the principal. If the principal sends his commodity to a place where it is the ordinary business of the person, to whom it is confided, to sell, it will be intended, that the commodity is sent thither for the purpose of sale.”
Such actual authority as Shearman must be referred to the letters relied on by plaintiff. In the first, that ■ of May 18, Dawson 'wrote Shearman “I have several cars of 3 lb. tomatoes to offer. I want to sell at once. I am getting ready for the
In support of his propositions, and based on this evidence, and on the theory of actual agency, and ratification of previous authorized acts of the agent, plaintiffs counsel have filed a very able and elaborate brief.
As already intimated we unhesitatingly say that in our opinion the evidence does not establish agency. Story on Agency, already cited, does not justify such conclusion. A written instrument, as the letters relied on here, in order that it may be held to create an agency, must clearly show on its face, or when read in the light of surrounding circumstances, that such was the
We tbink that the first proposition of actual agency, by the letters referred to, is not seriously relied upon. The chief contention is, that there was ratification, by silence, and by the subsequent letters of the defendant. As we have said the brief of counsel, on this latter proposition, goes upon the theory of ratification of unauthorized acts of agency. If' we could say that this evidence establishes the relationship of principal and agent, which we cannot do, the brief, based on that theory would be very persuasive, if not convincing. Thompson v. Manufacturing Co., 60 W. Va. 43, Dewing v. Hutton, 48 W. Va. 577, and so far as we can see all the other authorities cited by counsel are predicated upon the theory of agency in fact, and ratification of unauthorized acts of agency, in the manner indicated. The relationship of principal and agent not being established, therefore, the argument, and the authorities cited, will not support the propositions of counsel, and certainly they do not support the proposition that the evidence, not being conflicting, presents a question of law for the court, rather than one of fact for the jury.
When there is no agency, but an intermeddler or stranger, one not in privity with the principal by authority duly given, has assumed to act as agent, and the question is whether such unauthorized acts has been ratified, it becomes one of intention on the part of the assumed principal, a fact for jury determination. “Ratification of an unauthorized act. of a stranger”, says 1 Clark & Skyles, Law of Agency, page 348, “may not be implied as a conclusion of law from the silence of the party affected by the act, but it does not follow that it is incompetent to be submitted to the jury; and it may, as a circumstance, with others, be submitted to the jury as facts from which they may imply such ratification.” And quoting from the Massachusetts court, this writer says in the same connection: “It is a rule in the law of agency, that when the unauthorized act of an agent is done in the execution of a power conferred, in a mode not sanctioned by its terms, and in excess or misuse of the authority given, ratification by the principal is more readily implied from slight acts of confirmation. The duty to disaffirm
These authorities clearly demonstrate that his silence and the letters of Dawson written prior and subsequent to the sales by Shearman, were all proper matters to go in evidence to the jury on the question of his intent to ratify the unauthorized acts of Shearman. But they do not present a question of law for the court, and they do not present such a case of preponderance of evidence in favor of plaintiff as to justify us in saying that the court erred in denying the plaintiff a new trial. For these reasons the judgment below must be affirmed.
Affirmed.