Baldwin v. Tucker

65 S.W. 841, 112 Ky. 282, 1901 Ky. LEXIS 320
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 6, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 65 S.W. 841 (Baldwin v. Tucker) 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
Baldwin v. Tucker, 65 S.W. 841, 112 Ky. 282, 1901 Ky. LEXIS 320 (Ky. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinions

■Opinion op the court by

CHIEF JUSTICE PAYNTER —

Reversing.

On October 7, 1898, D. TET. Baldwin & Co., dealers in pianos and musical instruments, by a writing, authorized- J. W. Sparks to take orders for their musical instruments in Harrodsburg, Ky., and such other territory as might be agreed upon. The instruments and proceeds of sale were to be the property of appellants. The order® taken and sales made by him were not to be binding -on appellants until approved1 by them. Blank notes were furnished to him-, payable to appellants’ order, and they were to be subject to appellants’ approval when executed. On November 22, 1898, appellants shipped to J. W. Sparks, Lawremceburg, Ky., four pianos, for the purpose of taking orders therefor, according to the terms of the contract of agency. One of the four pianos shipped to him was sold to Charles Sparks, and one of them is the one in contest. On December 22, 1898, he sold'the appellee, Tucker, a piano for $120, for which he took a note payable to himself individually,' [285]*285twelve months after date, at the First National Bank, Harrodsburg. Upon receipt of the note and delivery of the piano, he discounted the note at the bank, and1 never accounted to appellants for any part of the proceeds. Four or five days after this transaction, appellee wrote to appellants, at Louisville, Ky., that he had bought the piano, Sparks not having made any report of sale to them. The company at .once declined to ratify the sale, anid' claimed the piano. The appellee refused to give it up, and this action was instituted to recover the possession of it, upon the claim that it belonged to them, as they had never parted with title thereto. The appellee resisted recovery, upon the idea that Sparks was acting for appellants, and that they were bound by his acts. Upon the proof as to the contract of agency and the value of the piano, etc., the court, at the conclusion of appellants’ testimony, instructed the jury to find for appellee.

It is a difficult question sometimes to determine whether an agency is general or special. It is sometimes held that where an agency is special as between principal and agent it is general between the principal and third persons. Where the agency is created by writing, it seems to be proper for the court to determine whether it is general oi special. If it be by parol it is for the jury to determine its character and extent. Mr. Mechem, in his work on Agency, section C, says:' “A universal agent is one authorized to transact all of the business of his principal of every kind. A general agent iis an agent who is empowered to transact all of the business of his principal of a particular kind or in a particular place. A special agent is one authorized to act only in a specific transaction. A principal can have but one universal agent. He may have a general agent in each line of his business, and in each of [286]*286several places. He may employ as many special agents as occasion may require. A universal agency is of very rare occurrence, the great majority of the cases being those which involve some form of general or special agency.” Sparks seems to have been made the agent, with limited powers', to transact all the business in the matter of selling musical instruments in the city of Harrodsburg and such other territory as might be agreed upon between the parties. Without deciding, we will assume, that he was a general agent for appellants to sell pianos in Harrodsburg. According to the terms of the contract, he bald no authority except to solicit orders for pianos. Where an agent is intrusted with goods to sell for his principal, he has no right to sell or deliver them in payment of his own debt. The creditor who receives goods under such an arrangement, notwithstanding he may be acting in good faith and in ignorance that the goods did not belong ho the agent, acquires no title thereto against the principal. Where the principal authorizes the agent to collect a demand, or receive payment of one, he can not be bound by the action of the agent except he actually collect the money.. The agent is not authorized to take the note of the debtor, payable t*o himself or to his principal. Mechem, Ag., sec. 354, says: “An agent intrusted with goods to sell for his principal has no right to sell or deliver them in payment of his own debt, or to pledge them as security for his own debt, and persons dealing with such an agent are bound to take notice of this limitation of his authority. A creditor therefore, who receives the goods under such an agreement, as well as his vendee, though acting in good faith, and in ignorance that the goods did not belong to the agent, acquires no title thereto, as against the principal.” The same author, in section 375, says: “'An agent authorized merely [287]*287to collect a demand, or to receive payment of a debt, can not bind his principal by any arrangement short of an actual collection and.' receipt of the money. He can not, therefore, take in payment the mote of the debtor, payable either to himself or to his principal; or the note or bond of himself, or of a third person; or a draft or order on a stranger, or horses, wheat, merchandise, or other property of any kind; nor can he set off a claim due from himself; or take property for his own use in payment.” In Grocery Co. v. Becket (22 R., 393), (57 S. W., 458), the court said: “"The general ruleds that the acts of an agent bind his principal wilhin the'scope of his apparent authority, but that the principal is never bound where the person dealing with the agent knows, or has reason to know, that the agent is exceeding his authority, or is perpetrating a fraud on his principal.” In Hoffman v. Insurance Co., 92 U. S., 161, 23 L. Ed., 539, it appeared that an agent of the company agreed to take in payment for the premium a horse for .himself and a note to himself. The insurance company refused to recognize the transaction, and in passing upon the question the court said: “The exercise of such a power by the agent was liable to two objections, — it was ultra vires, and it was a fraud as respects the company. Hoffman must have known that neither Goodwin nor Thayer had any authority to enter into<such an arrangement, and he was a party to the fraud. No valid contract as to the company could arise from such a transaction.” In Bertholf v. Quinlan, 68 Ill., 297, an agent had in his possession whisky for sale. He traded it for a piano. The court held that be had no authority to make such a contract, and that the principal was not bound thereby, and was entitled to recover possession of the whisky, or its value. In Holton v. Smith, 7 N. H., 451, an agent, with general authority [288]*288to sell his principal's goods did so, and received in pay-, inent a debt due from himself to the purchaser; The' court held that the principal* was entitled to recover the goods. It said; “Miller had an undoubted authority to sell the goods; but it was to sell them, not as his own, but as the goods of the plaintiff; and, acting as agent of the plaintiff, he had,no right to exchange them for other goods, or for his own note. By the disposition he made of them he 1 reated them as his own, and this dispositipn was not properly a sale; within the meaning of his authority to sell, but a delivery over, at a certain price, in payment of a demand against himself. Although in the nature of a sale, it is, in fact, a payment of his- debt with goods instead of money. If it might also be considered as a purchase by himself at the same time, that will not avail, as an agent has no right to purchase of himself What he is intrusted to sell.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
65 S.W. 841, 112 Ky. 282, 1901 Ky. LEXIS 320, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baldwin-v-tucker-kyctapp-1901.