65 N.J.L. 294 | N.J. | 1900
The opinion of the court was delivered by
In the years 1891 and 1893 the defendant, a married woman, gave to the plaintiff five promissory notes, each at three months, and a check, amounting in all, without interest, to $499.64, for oysters sold and delivered. Each of these instruments was signed by the defendant and was payable to the order of the plaintiff. Three of the notes and the check were payable at the Atlantic City National Bank; one of the notes was payable at the Union National Bank of Atlantic City, the remaining note was not payable in bank. The four notes that were made payable in bank, and the check, were duly presented for payment, which was refused,
The plaintiff thereupon brought suit on these instruments, to which the defendant pleaded the general issue, and, specially, that she signed said notes as surety for her husband, Antonio Repetto. The special plea does not mention the check. It was for 'the small sum of $16.14, and will be regarded for the purpose of this decision as covered by the special defence. The plaintiff joined issue on the first plea, and replied to the second plea that the notes were signed by the defendant, not as surety for her husband, but for her own usé and benefit. It was admitted at the trial that the notes and check sued on were made, fell due, were protested and were unpaid as in the declaration alleged. The controversy was as to the defence set up by the special plea.
In the view of the learned trial judge the evidence so clearly supported the special plea as to leave nothing for the consideration of the jury. He accordingly directed a verdict for the defendant. This direction was the subject of an exception on which error has been assigned. The sole question brought . up for review is whether the evidence on behalf of the plaintiff tended, in a substantial sense, to prove that the defendant signed the notes and check, not as surety for her husband, but for her own use and benefit. If this question is to be answered in the negative, there is no error on the record.; if in the affirmative, the case should have gone to the jury.
The defendant testified that she employed herself in gathering and preparing sea-moss, which she sold in New York City; that she was not engaged in the restaurant business at No. 1208 Atlantic avenue, at which place the oysters were delivered; that said business was carried on by her husband, Antonio Repetto, whose name was on the window of the restaurant; that she never ordered oysters from the plaintiff, and never owed him for oysters, and that, to use her own expression, she lent the notes and check to her husband. She relied also upon the fact that on the plaintiff’s books the 03rsters were charged not to herself, but to her husband.
The plaintiff, on the other hand, relied on proof that the
The learned counsel for the defendant, in order to escape the force of these considerations, sought, at the trial, and again before this court, to attribute a conclusive effect to the circumstance that the plaintiff charged the goods to Antonio Repetto, and not to the defendant. It may, indeed, be fairly gathered from the evidence that the idea of holding the wife was an after-thought. The plaintiff waited' for nearly five years after the last note was due before he brought suit. It was not, he testified, until shortly before he brought suit that he learned that the business had belonged to the wife and not to the husband. The argument in answer to his claim is tersely summed up in these words from the brief of counsel for the defendant: “The issue was not whose business was it, but whose debt.” This is true. Evidence as to the ownership of the business is useful only to furnish data for a conclusion as to who was the debtor. But the proposition, as employed on behalf of the defendant, contains the assumption that the debt was necessarily the debt of the person to whom credit was at first given. This ascribes to the original transaction a quality of finality that does not belong to it.
“The authorities are uniform in maintaining the doctrine that when the' principal is unknown to the vendor at the time •of the sale, he may, upon discovering the principal, resort to him, or to the agent with whom he dealt, at his election; and •on the other hand, where the vendor, at the time of the sale, knows the principal and understands that the buyer is the mere agent of another, and elects to give credit to the’ agent, making him the debtor, he cannot afterwards resort to the principal.”
The cases of Elliotl v. Bodine, 30 Vroom 567; Perth Amboy Manufacturing Co. v. Condit, 1 Zab. 659, and Borcherling v. Katz, 10 Stew. Eq. 150, illustrate this rule.
The marital relation does not disqualify one of the parties to it from acting as agent for the other. The case of Gulick v. Grover, 2 Vroom 182; S. C., 4 Id. 463, affords an example of a wife acting as agent for her husband. The case of Atwater v. Underhill, 7 C. E. Gr. 599, and that of Tresch v. Wirtz, 7 Stew. Eq. 124, affirmed on appeal in 9 Id. 356, .afford examples of a husband acting as agent for his wife. Antonio Eepetto might lawfully have, been agent for his wife. The plaintiff, although he had charged the goods to the husband, was not precluded from showing, if he could, that the relation of principal and agent existed. He offered evidence, which was received, that tended somewhat persuasively to support an inference that this relation existed. This evidence was proper for the consideration of the jury. With the proof in this situation, it was error to direct a verdict for the defendant. The judgment is reversed.
For affirmance—None.
For reversal—The Chancellor, Chief Justice, Van Syckel, Dixon, Garrison, Collins, Fort, Bogert, Hendrickson, Adams, Vredenburgh, Voorhees. 12.