10 Misc. 725 | New York Court of Common Pleas | 1895
This is an appeal from an order denying a new trial. The time to appeal from the judgment expired without an appeal being taken therefrom. It is nevertheless valid, and must be heard. Voisin v. Insurance Co., 123 N. Y. 120, 25 N. E. 325. Notwithstanding there is no such appeal as an appeal from an order denying a new trial, this court, at general term, must consider whether the case has been submitted to the jury upon an erroneous theory of the law; whether any erroneous instruction was given; whether the appellants have sustained any injury by the jury having been misled because of the lack of proper instruction; also whether the verdict was against the weight of evidence and the justice of the
“New York, Nov. 16th, 1892.
“Messrs. Whitman Bros., Produce Exchange, City—Gentlemen: We herewith confirm sale to you of 1,000 bbls. prime crude cotton oil, from Sulphur Springs and Wolfe City, Texas, at 20y2 cents per gallon, delivered New York City, in tank cars, to be furnished the mills by you as needed.
“Yours, very truly, Faith Cotton-Oil Agency of N. Y.,
“Edwin L. Johnson, Prop’r.”
The appellants are the Messrs. Whitman Bros., to whom the above is addressed, and the respondent is Edwin L. Johnson, the signer of the letter. The oil was never delivered, and the Messrs. Whitman , Bros, brought this action against the defendant as principal in the transaction. The respondent’s defense was that he acted merely as the agent of two oil companies in Texas, and was therefore not liable. Nevertheless, as appears by the contract above, he signed it personally, and did not disclose to the appellants, as the latter claim, the name of the seller until the time came to send the tank cars; and an examination of the notice of sale sent the oil companies shows that he did not disclose to them the name of his purchaser. On the trial the respondent sought to relieve himself from the responsibility of the contract sued on by claiming, not that he disclosed his principal to appellants, but that he had made certain statements from which the appellants should have inferred that he was not acting as principal in the matter, but as agent for certain companies, the names of which he did not disclose; also that he had before that time dealt with the appellants as agent, and that they well knew he was in his transactions acting as agent, and not as principal. These facts were, however, denied by the appellants, and respondent relied chiefly upon the notice or advertisement contained on the letterhead used in writing the confirmatory letter before set forth. These words were above that contract, and in much finer print, and are as follows: “The Faith Cotton-Oil Agency represents the Independent Oil Mills and Refineries, and does an exclusively commission and brokerage business in cotton-seed products. Products sold by sample to arrive on consignment, with liberal advances, or for future shipment to any • market, with contracts made direct between principals, if desired.” And also upon another form used by him, containing the expressions, “Cotton-seed products on commission” and “Manufacturers’ agents of the independent Mills.” The evidence is contradictory as to when and how this confirmatory letter was received by appellants; respondent claiming that the contract was made verbally, and confirmed by the letter, which was sent by mail later in the day. The witness Whitman testified that he thought it was by a personal delivery,
The whole controversy turned upon a question of whether or not the contract was made between the parties with the full knowledge of both that the respondent was acting in the matter as an agent merely, or whether he was acting as principal, or as agent for an undisclosed principal or principals. The law governing such transactions is too well settled to need extensive argument or review. Miller v. Railroad Co., 90 N. Y. 430; Hill v. Miller, 76 N. Y. 32; Rawson v. Railroad Co., 2 Abb. Pr. (N. S.) 220; Pearsall v. Telegraph Co., 124 N. Y. 256, 26 N. E. 534; Mahoney v. Kent, 7 Misc. Rep. 726, 28 N. Y. Supp. 19; Cobb v. Knapp, 71 N. Y. 348. From the cases cited, the rule of law applicable to this case is clearly deducible, and, according to such rule, the respondent must show to the satisfaction of the jury—First, that when he made the 'contract he had° authority from the persons for whom he made it to make it in the form he did; and, second, that he not only disclosed the fact of his agency to the appellants at the time of making the contract, and gave them an opportunity to discover who the principals were, but also disclosed the names of such principals to the appellants in such a way that the contract would bind the principals, and not himself. And while it is very apparent to the professional mind that these rules of law were clearly in the mind of the learned justice who tried the case, and were presupposed by. him, yet in such charge to the jury he nowhere explicitly states to them the second of these rules; that is, that at the time of making the contract, or before doing so, he disclosed the fact of his agency to the appellants. Hence, at the close of the charge, appellants’ counsel asked the court to charge the jury “that the Messrs. Whitman Bros, are not bound by any notice on this written contract from Edwin L. Johnson, printed in very small type on the upper left-hand corner of this paper, unless the defendant first brought home to the Messrs. Whitman Bros, actual knowledge of this particular notice,” to which the court replied: “I charge as counsel requests, namely, that the Messrs. WTiitman are not bound by that notice up there about the Faith Agency doing an exclusive commission and brokerage business,—not at all, unless the Messrs. Whitman saw that, and whether they saw it and read it or not, or knew of it, you must determine, in view of the fact that the contract immediately, or a short time after its execution, that very paper was handed to the Messrs. Whitman, and has been in their custody from that day to this, so far as there is any evidence in the case; and, furthermore, —correct me if I am wrong,—Mr. Whitman, going on the stand, did not say he had not seen that” In view of the charge thus made, appellants’ counsel requested the court to further charge “that they must disregard that notice as bearing on the written part of this contract in evidence, without it was brought home to the plaintiffs at the time of the making of this contract,”- which the court refused to charge, and proceeded to state that there was abundant evidence, if the jury believed it, for them to find that Mr. Whitman knew of the notices on the face of the paper. But inasmuch as the court nowhere