Berkovitz v. Morton-Gregson Co.

198 N.W. 868, 112 Neb. 154, 33 A.L.R. 85, 1924 Neb. LEXIS 113
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMay 8, 1924
DocketNo. 22780
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 198 N.W. 868 (Berkovitz v. Morton-Gregson Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Berkovitz v. Morton-Gregson Co., 198 N.W. 868, 112 Neb. 154, 33 A.L.R. 85, 1924 Neb. LEXIS 113 (Neb. 1924).

Opinion

Good, J.

Sam Berkovitz, the plaintiff, brought this action'against Morton-Gregson Company, B. F. Kleeberger and the State Bank of Omaha, to recover payments made in excess of amounts due on accounts of Morton-Gregson Company against plaintiff for merchandise. Trial was' had to the court without a jury, resulting in a judgment for plaintiff as against Kleeberger, and in favor of defendants, MortonGregson Company and State Bank of Omaha. Plaintiff appeals. The case presented in this court involves only the liability of Morton-Gregson Company to plaintiff.

At the time of the transactions, out of which this controversy arises, plaintiff operated a retail meat-market in Omaha, Nebraska, and Morton-Gregson Company was engaged in the meat-packing industry at Nebraska City, Ne[156]*156braska. The packing company employed Kleeberger as its salesman and collector for the Omaha territory. In the course of his employment as salesman, Kleeberger called upon the plaintiff and took several orders each week for merchandise which were forwarded to his principal at Nebraska City. These orders were filled and shipped to plaintiff, and an invoice for each order filled was mailed to plaintiff. The accounts for the merchandise thus sold were payable weekly. At the end of each week, Morton-Gregson Company prepared and sent to Kleeberger a statement of plaintiff’s account. On the following Monday morning Kleeberger would call upon the plaintiff and collect the amount due. The amounts so collected were deposited in the Omaha National Bank to the credit of Morton-Gregson Company. This company had provided Kleeberger with a rubber stamp, as follows: “Pay to Omaha National Bank, Omaha, Neb., or order. Morton-Gregson Co., Nebraska City, Neb. 208,” which he was required to stamp upon the back of the checks that were payable to Morton-Gregson Company. Plaintiff paid the. accounts as presented by checks drawn on his account in the First National Bank and made payable to Morton-Gregson Company.

In January, 1918, Kleeberger began the practice of altering the statements of accounts against the plaintiff by changing the footings or totals of the accounts, so as to show a much larger amount than was actually due. Plaintiff did not check up these statements, but accepted them as correct and drew his checks therefor. When Kleeberger began this practice, he did not deposit these checks to the credit of the Morton-Gregson Company in the Omaha National Bank, but indorsed on them the name of Morton-Gregson Company, per B. F. Kleeberger, and deposited them in his private account in the State Bank of Omaha. He would then draw a check upon his own account, payable to Morton-Gregson Company, for the amount actually due the company and deposit this check in the Omaha National Bank to the credit of Morton-Gregson Company. This practice continued for more than two years before it was dis[157]*157covered. The amounts so paid by plaintiff to Kleeberger in excess of the amounts due Morton-Gregson Company amounted in the aggregate to nearly $3,000.

Kleeberger was called as a witness in behalf of defendants and admitted his fraudulent conduct, and that he had raised the footings of the statements without any authority from his principal. On cross-examination he claimed that he did not personally profit by his perfidy; that he used the excess collections received from plaintiff in adjusting claims of other customers of Morton-Gregson Company for shortage, spoilage, etc. Such claims, however, were not submitted to his principal for adjustment, and MortonGregson Company had no knowledge either of the excess collections at the time they were made, or that Kleeberger was adjusting claims of customers for alleged shortage, spoilage, etc.; nor had the company authorized him to make such adjustments.

Plaintiff contends that Morton-Gregson Company is liable to him for the excess collections upon two grounds: (1) That the acts of Kleeberger in presenting the altered and raised statements of account and in making the excess collections were within the apparent scope of his employment; and (2) that the company is estopped to deny liability, since the excess collections were used in discharging claims of other customers against it.

So far as the latter claim is concerned, we think it wholly devoid of merit. Kleeberger was not authorized to adjust any claims for shortage, spoilage, or any other kind of claim, against his principal. Whether these claims were just or unjust is not shown, and whether or not they would have been allowed, if they had been presented to MortonGregson Company, is a matter1 of mere speculation. Under the evidence, it does not appear that any valid or just claims against Morton-Gregson Company were paid and discharged by Kleeberger out of the excess collections. So far as appears, Morton-Gregson Company has not profited in any manner by the fraudulent acts of its agent. It has [158]*158not accepted any benefits on account thereof. No facts appear that would create an estoppel.

Whether the acts of Kleeberger in altering and raising the statements of account and collecting excessive amounts, which he appropriated to his own use, can be said to be within the ostensible or apparent scope of his authority is a more serious question. While the statements of account were correctly made out at the home office and sent to Kleeberger for collection, the latter, when he presented the altered and raised statements of account to plaintiff, was certainly acting for and on behalf of his principal, and was within the line of his employment. So far as plaintiff was concerned, Kleeberger, to all appearances, stood as the agent and representative of Morton-Gregson Company, and was acting within the apparent scope of his authority. Morton-Gregson Company was without question a reputable business concern, and plaintiff, we think, was justified in the belief that its agent was reliable and trustworthy, and was warranted in the belief that the trusted agent of the Morton-Gregson Company was presenting accurate and true statements of his account. That he relied on the statements as being accurate and true was beyond question. We think he was justified in so acting. The fraud was perpetrated by Kleeberger while acting within the apparent scope of his authority.

In McFadden v. Lynn, 49 Ill. App. 166, it is held: “A principal holding out an agent as having authority to represent him, and thereby asserting or impliedly admitting that the agent is worthy of trust and confidence, is bound by all his acts within the apparent scope of the employment. Hence, the principal may be held for the fraudulent acts of the agent.”

In Commercial Union Assurance Co. v. State, 113 Ind. 331, it is held: “An insurance company must bear a loss sustained by the misconduct or disobedience of its agent, acting within the scope of his authority, rather than the assured, who has dealt fairly with him as such, without notice.”

[159]*159This court has held in Bull v. Mitchell, 47 Neb. 647, 654; “Where one of two innocent persons must suffer through the misfeasance of the agent of one, that one must suffer who has placed the agent in a position to perpetrate the fraud complained of.” The rule above laid down is reaffirmed in Rehmeyer v. Lysinger, 109 Neb. 805.

In Adams v. Cole, 1 Daly (N.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
198 N.W. 868, 112 Neb. 154, 33 A.L.R. 85, 1924 Neb. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berkovitz-v-morton-gregson-co-neb-1924.