Alexander Eccles & Co. v. Louisville & N. R.

198 F. 898, 1912 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1366
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Alabama
DecidedAugust 2, 1912
DocketNo. 1,836
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 198 F. 898 (Alexander Eccles & Co. v. Louisville & N. R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alexander Eccles & Co. v. Louisville & N. R., 198 F. 898, 1912 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1366 (N.D. Ala. 1912).

Opinion

GRUBB, District Judge.

The plaintiff relied in support of its motion for a new trial exclusively upon its exception'to the following portion of the court’s oral charge to the jury:

“One principle of law I omitted-to call your attention to in my charge. I said that notice to Bywater of irregularities that might be sufficient to charge him with knowledge that these were spurious bills of lading of the character the evidence disclosed if he were the proper kind of agent, that is, one authorized to receive the notice, would be notice to the company. I want to qualify that to this extent: Where an agent himself commits fraud, as for instance in this case suppose you are reasonably satisfied from the' evidence the fact to be that Bywater and Knight conspired to commit this fraud, then Bywater would be the guilty agent, and in that event notice to him under any circumstances, as I understand the law, would not be notice to the defendant, because the law says that it could not be presumed that the guilty agent would communicate the notice to any other officer of the defendant.' Tou see what I mean. If Knight was running this scheme by himself, not in collusion with Bywater, and Bywater received notice of this kind, then the notice to Bywater, under the qualifications I before stated, might be notice to the company, because in that case Bywater would not be. a co-conspirator, and it would be presumed he would do his duty, and notice to him would be notice to the company; but, on the other hand, if you should be .persuaded from the evidence that Bywater and Knight were in collusion, and that Bywater was committing a fraud, as well as Knight, then notice to Bywater would be no benefit to the company, because the presumption would be, as Bywater was committing a fraud of his own, he would not give the defendant any benefit of notice he received; in other words, he would conceal the notice just like he did the crime.”

The correctness Of this part of the court’s charge depends upon the issues that were submitted to the jury.

The action was one for deceit, predicated upon the false representa-[899]*899lions contained in certain purported bills of lading of defendant that the cotton therein described had been received by the defendant, when in fact it had not been so received. The liability of the defendant depended upon whether this confessedly false recital in bills of lading was or was not its representation. If the bills of lading containing it were its bills of lading, the representations therein would be its representations, and vice versa. The bills of lading were signed in its name by John W. Knight, a cotton shipper, who was not its agent. Authority to sign the bills of lading for defendant was claimed by Knight to have been derived from defendant’s foreign freight agent, Bywater. Under the authority of the case of Friedlander v. T. & P. R. R. Co., 130 U. S. 416, 9 Sup. Ct. 570, 32 L. Ed. 991, the jury was instructed that By water had no power to authorize Knight to issue bids of lading for the defendant for cotton not contemporaneously received by it and of the delivery of which to it tiiere was then no presein expectation, and that bills of lading issued by Knight under such claimed authority would not bind defendant, nor would the representations contained in them be the defendant’s representations.

In order to fasten liability upon defendant, the court charged the jury that the plaintiff would have to show a course of business relating to such bills of lading, continued so long and under such circumstances as to impute to defendant knowledge of their issue by Knight before receipt of the cotton and acquiescence therein; and that in that event only would the bills of lading so issued by Knight be the defendant’s bills of lading and fix responsibility upon it for the false representations contained in them. From such a course of business, knowledge on the part of responsible agents of defendant would be presumed, even in the absence of a showing of actual knowledge on their part; and it was on this alone that the case was submitted to the jury.

Actual notice of the course of business to defendant would avail as well as presumptive notice. Actual notice of a kind to displace presumptive notice would have to be fastened upon defendant through an agent authorized to bind it. The court charged the jury that, as Bywater had no authority to issue or cause „to be issued on defendant’s behalf bills of lading in the absence of the receipt of the cotton, notice to him alone, of all defendant’s agents or officers, that such bills of lading were being so issued by Knight on his supposed authority, could not amount to a ratification by defendant, since Bywater, being without authority to issue or cause them to be issued, was likewise without authority to ratify by subsequent knowledge or acquiescence what he could not have originally authorized to be done.

If the court was correct in holding that By water was without authority to issue or cause to be issued bills of lading without receipt of cotton, it seems clear that the court was also correct in charging the jury that no knowledge on By water’s part of transactions of like character, if confined to him alone, would amount lo a ratification by defendant of such a course of business, since Bywater, being without authority to issue them or cause them to be issued, could not by [900]*900subsequent knowledge and acquiescence ratify for defendant what he was without authority to authorize.

If inquiry had been made through Bywater of defendant by plaintiff as to the validity of the bills of lading, the basis of the suit, and in the performance of defendant’s duty, to give such information to plaintiff, Bywater, as its authorized agent in answering such inquiry, had certified to their validity when he knew of their invalidity, a different case would have been presented and one like those relied on by plaintiff. Bywater’s knowledge would then have been defendant’s knowledge, since defendant was, through him, performing a duty resting upon it, and, having delegated to him the performance of this duty, it could not escape the consequences of his knowledge in the particular transaction.

In this case, on the contrary, Bywater was in no way concerned in the transactions involved in the suit. No inquiry was made of him by plaintiff, nor was anything he did or said influential in inducing the plaintiff to take the bills of lading as genuine. So far as is shown by the record, neither Bywater nor any other agent of defendant knew of the issue or existence of the specific bills of lading relied upon by plaintiff for its cause of action until long after plaintiff had accepted the drafts on the faith of their genuineness. The defendant therefore failed to perform no duty it owed plaintiff with reference to these bills of lading through Bywater’s act or default.

So that the only relevancy the question of Bywater’s knowledge could have had in the case would have been to fasten knowledge of the course of business on defendant, and thus make it responsible by ratification and acquiescence for what, for want of authority in By-water, it was not responsible in its inception. But Bywater’s knowledge, if proven, was insufficient for this purpose, since he, as agent, could not ratify'an act which he was without power to have authorized.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
198 F. 898, 1912 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1366, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alexander-eccles-co-v-louisville-n-r-alnd-1912.