The plaintiff was a tenant of certain residence premises in Davenport. The owner was Margaret Harrington, nonresident of the city.
The defendants were related to such owner, and acted as her agents in the renting of said premises and in collecting the rents therefrom. The plaintiff originally rented the premises from a Mrs. William Harrington, another relative of the owner’s, and made the initial payment of rent to her. Thereafter, she paid all the rent to the defendants. After she had been in the occupancy of the premises about one year, she suffered a remarkable accident. The ground
As to the first ground, it is enough to say that defendants were not in occupancy of the premises in any other sense than that they acted as agents for the owner in reference thereto.
The evidence discloses no wrongful act on the part of the defendants in an affirmative sense. There was no misfeasance. If they can be charged with negligence, it must be because they failed to perform some duty owed by them to the plaintiff.
A defendant may not plead agency in defense of his wrongful act, to the injury of another. Even an agent'may be held personally liable for wrongful acts of misfeasance