Brown v. Arrott

6 Watts & Serg. 402
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 15, 1843
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 6 Watts & Serg. 402 (Brown v. Arrott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Arrott, 6 Watts & Serg. 402 (Pa. 1843).

Opinion

[416]*416The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Kennedy, J.

The defendant having been the factor of the plaintiff, the latter seeks to charge the former in this action, among other things, with certain losses arising from sales made by the defendant or his sub-agent, of goods belonging to the plaintiff, which losses, as the plaintiff alleges, have accrued from the negligence and want of proper care on the part of the defendant. The counsel of the defendant, aware no doubt that it was the duty of their client, as the agent of the plaintiff, to show that he had kept him apprised of his doings, and that he had given him notice within a reasonable time of all such acts and circumstances as were important to his interest, lest by his neglect to do so h^should be held liable to indemnify the plaintiff, offered to read in evidence the deposition of David Arrott, wherein, among other things, he testifies, “ that the defendant gave this deponent particular instructions to see the plaintiff, and to inform him of the state of his consignment particularly, and the sales which had been made at Boston.” And again, “ that he visited the plaintiff at Dundee, and made him particularly acquainted with the state of his consignment and of the sales made at Boston;” but in his cross-examination he says, “ when the deponent was at Dundee, he had no copy of account sales from Young, (meaning the defendant’s sub-agent who made the sales at Boston), and of course showed none to the plaintiff.” The first two recited clauses of this deposition were objected to as not being admissible in evidence, but the court thinking otherwise, overruled the objection, to which the counsel for the plaintiff took a bill of exception, which is the ground of the first error assigned.

It certainly was the duty of the defendant at all times to keep the plaintiff, his principal, apprised of his doings, and to give him notice within a reasonable time of all such acts and circumstances as were important to his interest; and if by his neglect to do this the plaintiff has suffered a loss, he is entitled to be indemnified by the defendant. From the evidence in the case, it appears that the defendant, in the latter end of September 1822, forwarded a portion of the plaintiff’s goods consigned to him for sale, to James Young, of Boston, with instructions to sell the same there. That under the authority of the defendant, Young sold of the goods thus forwarded, in the following months of October and November, to the amount of about $720 nett, on a credit of four months, which became payable in the months of February and March then next following. And again in the months of March, April and May 1823, Young sold the residue of the goods of the plaintiff for the additional sum of $1167.70 nett, making in all, after defraying the charges and expenses attending the sales, the sum total of $1887.70. David Arrott, the witness, as he states in his deposition, visited the plaintiff at Dundee, in Scotland, in the month of August or September 1823, and although sales had been made [417]*417in the months of October and November 1822, of nearly one-half of the goods forwarded to Young at Boston, a good part of a year before that, and the monies arising therefrom received by Young at least as early as February and March 1823, it does not appear that any attempt was ever made by the defendant to advise or notify the plaintiff of the sales at Boston, or the receipt of the monies thereon, in any form or manner whatever, until the time that David Arrott says he visited the plaintiff in August or September of the latter year. The -question then presents itself, if the defendant had not been in default and guilty of neglecting his duty before that, by not having’communicated to the plaintiff the account of the sales and monies received thereon at Boston, by Young, was the communication testified to have been made in regard thereto by David Arrott, such a statement and notice of what had been done and transacted relative to the sales at Boston, and the monies received thereon, as the defendant was bound to give in order to acquit himself from the imputation of neglect of duty as the plaintiff's agent, which otherwise might be brought against him ? We are of the opinion it was not. We think that it ought to have been in writing, and that it ought to have contained an account of the various sales made at different times, with their respective dates and the several sums of money received thereon by the sub-agent, as far as known to the defendant, or he had it in his power by reasonable diligence to inform himself. But this was not done even verbally, as would appear from the narrative of the witness; nor is it credible that he could have given the plaintiff a verbal account of the whole transaction in detail, as he had no written statement of it himself at Dundee, when he saw the plaintiff. We, therefore, consider that the court below erred in admitting those parts of the deposition of David Arrott to be read in evidence to the jury, which were objected to by the counsel for the plaintiff.

The second and third errors will be considered together, as they relate to the same point. They are exceptions to the opinion of the court in admitting the testimony of Samuel Comly, Joseph Cabot, Samuel Snelling and Benjamin W. Richards, which was offered and given for the purpose of showing in effect that the defendant was not to be regarded as being guilty of negligence in suffering Young, his sub-agent at Boston, to receive the monies received by him on the sales made by him of certain parts of the goods before the whole were sold, and to use the same for the space of three or four months without even requiring him to pay over or forward the monies so received, and without taking any steps to obtain payment thereof until Young became insolvent and unable to pay, because, as the counsel for the defendant alleged and offered to prove by the witness just named, it was not usual for factors or agents to transmit to their principals or employers monies received by them, as long as any part of the whole con[418]*418signment remained unsold, or if sold, as long as any portion of the monies to be paid thereon remained unpaid, when the honesty or ability of the agents or sub-agents were not questionable, and that such delay on the part of the Jatter to transmit the money actually received and coming to the employers, furnished no ground to suspect or believe that the money might be lost if suffered to remain until the sale of the whole quantity of the goods forwarded should be effected and the monies received thereon. Where the owner of the goods or the principal is advised from time to time by his agent of the sales as they are made, and again of the receipt of the monies as they are paid thereon, and according to the understanding that exists between them, arising either from a special agreement or a previous course of dealing between them, or the established usage or custom, if there be any, regulating the same, the principal or late owner of the goods is to call on his agent or factor and receive his money, or to draw upon him for it, the latter may retain it until it is demanded; but where the factor or ■agent is bound either by the agreement or previous course of dealing between them, or the usage of trade in regard thereto, to forward the money to his principal or employer, it is clearly his duty to do so, as he shall receive it, though it be only a part of what he expects, by the earliest opportunity, and no practice to the contrary will either justify or excuse his retaining it beyond such time, unless the sum shall be so small as not to justify the expense of forwarding it.

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Bluebook (online)
6 Watts & Serg. 402, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-arrott-pa-1843.