Allen v. Sykes & Little

28 Ky. 611, 5 J.J. Marsh. 611, 1831 Ky. LEXIS 84
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 18, 1831
StatusPublished

This text of 28 Ky. 611 (Allen v. Sykes & Little) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allen v. Sykes & Little, 28 Ky. 611, 5 J.J. Marsh. 611, 1831 Ky. LEXIS 84 (Ky. Ct. App. 1831).

Opinion

Chief Justice Robertson,

delivered the opinion of-the court.

On the ‘21st of September, L82L, James Allen, the appellant, gave to Sykes and Little, the appellees, the tollo'.ring obligation:

“1 hereby oblige myself to draw on my commission merchant, in New Orleans, for the sum of $2,777 30 cents, when the tobacco which 1 intend shipping the next season arrives in New Orleans, in favor of Sykes and Little; or in case I choose to consign said tobacco to Sykes, one of the aforesaid parties, in that case,, said Sykes and Little are to sell said tobacco, for tlie best price they can, and after paying costs and charges out of the tobacco, to apply the proceeds to the payment of the above amount, and if- there remains any surplus, that balance to be subject to my order.”

(Signed). JAMES ALLEN.”

On the 22nd of June, 1822, Sykes and Little gave the following receipt:

“Received of Robert Allen fifty nine hogsheads of tobacco, the nett proceeds, of winch is to be placed to the credit of James Allen, when sold.”

(Signed) SYKsiS & LITTLE.”

The appellees sued the appellant on the foregoing-covenant, averring a failure to draw on the commission. merchant, and also to consign the tobacco co Sykes, or • to pay the fj2,777 3 cents; and the appellant also sued the appellees in assumpsity for failing to- sell the tobacco for which they had given their receipt, or account to him for the price. The two cases having been consolidated by consent, were tried together on the general issues, with leave to give any thing in evidence which might have been pleaded. A jury having found a verdict for the appellant, for f>l 72 cents in the action of assumpsit, and a verdict against the appellees in the action of covenant, the circuit court,. on .the motion of the appellees, granted a new trial, on the ground that the evidence did not, in the opinion of the judge [612]*612authorize the verdicts. On the next trial, a verdict-' was returned in favor of the appellees for $1658, in damages in the action of covenant, and against the appellant in the action of assumpsit; and the court having overruled a motion for a- new trial,- and rendered judgments on the verdicts, this appeal is prosecuted by Allen to reverse the judgments.

Only two questions are presented for consideration. 1st. Did the court err in overruling the appellant’s motion for a new trial? 2nd. Did it err in granting' a new trial to the appellees? The court gave an instruction to the jury on the last trial, but as there was no exception to it, we shall not consider it, except so far as it may be involved incidentally in consideration of the propriety of the last verdict.

The following is a synopsis of all the evidence com tained in the record. In the spring 1822, Robert Allen shipped to Orleans, twenty fivehogsheads of tobacco in his own name, and fifty hogsheads in the joint-names of himself and J. Allen, (his father,) and purchased at Orleans, about seventy hogsheads, which had been. carried thither by-Rhodes. Having sol'd to Proud-fit sixty one hogsheads selected from the whole quantity, as the best quality, he delivered to the appellees, fifty nine hogsheads of what remained unsold, and took from them the receipt which has been quoted. At the dale of the receipt, first rate tobacco was estimated at from four .to five dollars a hundredweight; .and tobacco of inferior quality, at from one and a quarter to- ’ three dollars and fifty cents; but it was “dull” at those prices, and was declining. The fifty nine hogsheads were shipped to New York, and were there sold for a price, which, after deducting incidental costs, left in the hands of the appellees a sum less than that due to them by the appellant, by about the amount of the judgment in their favor. When the receipt was given, the appellees suggested the propriety of sending the tabacco to New York to be sold. Robert Allen swears, that he replied that he would not take on himself the responsibilty of directing *i shipment to New York, but would defer to the counsel of the commission merchant, with wo.om he had, on his arrival at Orleans, deposited the tobacco. The commission merchant was present and gave his opinion, but what it was. w< [613]*613¿tie left only to infer. When Robert Allen purchased the seventy hogsheads from Rhodes, he stated that he bad intended to send it to New York; about the time when the receipt was given, he said that the tobacco was to be shipped to New York; and after he returned to Kentucky he stated that it had been so shipped.

Prior to the receipt, he hncl himself shipped twenty of the fifty nine hogsheads to Arew York; this we are bound to infer from the testimony of Robert Allen himself, (who swore that he had shipped twenty of the fifty" nine hogsheads to New York, before the date of the receipt; but afterwards, on cross examination, stated that the twenty hogsheads which he had shipped to New York, might not have been included in the receipt, but might have been shipped on some other account, but that he did not recollect of shipping to New York any tobacco which was not included in the receipt,) and also from the testimony of Atwood, who swore that Robert Allen shipped some tobacco to New York, prior to the date of the receipt by the appellees for fifty nine hogsheads.

The foregoing facts are sufficient to justify the last verdict. The jury had a right to infer from them, that the tobacco, was shipped to New York, at the instance, or with the concurrence of Robert Allen; and the) had aright albo to infer, that Robert Allen had authority, either delegated to him as agent, or derived from his actual or ostensible proprietorship as a partner with his father, sufficient to excuse the appellees for any alleged breach of duty in selling the tobacco in New York.

Robert Allen swore that he had no authority from his father to ship; or authorize the appellees to ship the tobacco to New York. But this means only that he had no express authority or instruction to that eftect, and is not inconsistent with a rational and allowable inference, that even if he had no interest in the tobacco, he had an implied general authority as agent to sell, to buy, or dispose of tobacco for his father, in any manner which he should deem most prudent and expedient, especially as he had purchased a part of the tobacco at Orleans, and had shipped some of it to New York before the receipt was given; and as there is no proof of any special or limited agency.

If authority of agent be not in fact general, yet if bills of Ruling and acts done indicate general power as regards the subject mat ter of bis a gfiicy; unless notice,be shewn bis authority to control, the articles entrusted to his care, will be deemed adequate. Error to set aside a verdict if the evidence would an thorizc jury to find for either party.

Bui, if as agent, his authority was, in fact, special ana not general, the bills of lading and his own acts proved that he was either an actual or ostensible partner; and therefore, so far as the appellees are concerned, his authority to control the tobacco, was sufficient to justify the sale by them in New York, unless they had been notified that his apparent was inconsistent with his r.al power. Besides, the jury had a right to infer that the appellees had no other motive for selling the tobacco in New York, than a desire to promote the interest of the appellant, and that they acted throughout, in perfect good faith.

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Bluebook (online)
28 Ky. 611, 5 J.J. Marsh. 611, 1831 Ky. LEXIS 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-v-sykes-little-kyctapp-1831.