Cram v. Sickel

71 N.W. 724, 51 Neb. 828, 1897 Neb. LEXIS 369
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 3, 1897
DocketNo. 7337
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 71 N.W. 724 (Cram v. Sickel) 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
Cram v. Sickel, 71 N.W. 724, 51 Neb. 828, 1897 Neb. LEXIS 369 (Neb. 1897).

Opinion

Ragan, C.

George F. Oram sued Bernard Sickel and Luther P. Ludden, copartners, in the district court of Lancaster county to recover a balance on account for goods sold and delivered by Oram to Sickel and Ludden. The defendants below had a verdict and judgment and Oram prosecutes here a petition in error.

To a proper understanding of the points presented in this case a short statement of the facts admitted and established by the finding of the jury becomes essential.

Prior to August, 1892, Sickel and Ludden dissolved their copartnership, the agreement of dissolution providing that Sickel should assume the liabilities and be entitled to the assets of the firm. Prior to August, 1892, Oram sent the account he held against Sickel and Lud[829]*829den to an attorney at law residing in Lincoln, Nebraska, for collection. Sickel was at that time indebted to the attorney, and the latter presented the claims of Cram to Sickel for payment, and the negotiation between them resulted in Sickel giving to the attorney a note of the firm of Sickel & Lndden, payable to the attorney’s order for the full amount of the Cram claim and the amount which Sickel owed the attorney and secured this note by chattel mortgage upon the stock of goods formerly owned by Sickel & Lndden. Subsequently the attorney seized the property conveyed by the chattel mortgage and sold it, paid the debt due to himself from Sickel, the cost of the foreclosure proceeding, and had on hand a few dollars to apply on Cram’s debt.

As already stated, this suit is to recover the balancé owing from Sickel & Ludden to Cram on his account As a defense to the action Ludden pleaded that Cram’s attorney agreed with Sickel at the time the latter gave him the note and chattel mortgage that he, Ludden, should be released and discharged from all liability to Cram in consideration of Sickel’s giving the attorney the note and mortgage which he did give him. Whether this agreement was actually made by the attorney was one of the issues litigated on the trial, and in justice to the attorney it must be said that he strenuously denied having ever made any such arrangement; but the jury found that he had and we are constrained to say that there is sufficient evidence to sustain that finding, although the evidence is very unsatisfactory. Sickel defended the suit on the ground that at the time the attorney seized the property under the chattel mortgage he voluntarily surrendered the mortgaged property under an agreement between him and Cram’s attorney that by so doing the mortgaged property should be taken and accepted in full satisfaction of the note which it was pledged to secure. Whether this arrangement was made was another issue litigated on the trial, and the jury found that it was so entered into; and the evidence, we think, supports the [830]*830finding, although we frankly confess that had we been trying the issue we should have reached a different conclusion. Soon after the attorney took from Sickel the note and chattel mortgage, he notified Cram of what he had done, and Cram approved of it. The attorney also notified Cram that he had seized the property and foreclosed the chattel mortgage and realized from that sale some $50 or $60 altogether, and the $10 or $15 of this sum that was coming to Oram was, by his consent, retained by the attorney. But Cram never had any knowledge or notice that his attorney had agreed to release Ludden, if such agreement was made, and never had any knowledge or notice that his attorney had agreed to take the mortgaged property in satisfaction of the debt, i f such an arrangement was made. On the trial the district court, at the request of the defendants in error, instructed the jury as follows: “The jury are instructed that where a contract made by an agent for his principal is accepted and ratified by the principal the principal is charged with all of the instrumentalities used by the agent in obtaining the contract; and in this case, if J. S. Bishop, as agent or attorney, procured a chattel mortgage for plaintiff’s benefit from the defendant Sickel upon the agreement that defendant Ludden should be released and that the chattel mortgage was accepted and enforced by plaintiff, then defendant Ludden is released as per such agreement, whether defendant Bishop had authority to make it or not.” The court refused to give an instruction asked by Cram to the effect that an attorney who held a claim for collection had no authority to receive anything in payment of such claim except money, unless specially authorized so to do by his principal. We think the court erred in refusing to give the instruction requested, and erred in giving the instruction which it did. Bishop was the agent of Oram for collecting the debt owing to him by Sickel & Ludden. They dealt with Bishop knowing that- he was an agent, and they were bound to take notice of the extent of his authority, and, [831]*831in the absence of express authority from his principal, Bishop was not invested with authority to accept in payment of his principal’s debt the stock of goods. (Mathews v. Hamilton, 23 Ill., 470.)

The authority of an agent to collect the debt of his principal does not invest such agent with authority to take the property other than money of the debtor in payment of such a claim. (Taylor v. Robinson, 14 Cal., 396.)

Without special authority an agent can only receive payment of the debt due his principal in money in the legal currency of the country. (Ward v. Smith, 74 U. S., 447; McCormick v. Wood Mowing & Reaping Machine Co., 72 Ind., 518; Graydon v. Patterson, 13 Ia., 256; Fellows v. Northrup, 39 N. Y., 117.)

In Nowlan v. Jackson, 16 Ill., 272, it was held that an attorney employed to collect a debt had no authority to compromise the debt on payment of a part thereof, nor to accept in satisfaction of such debt anything but money. (Lewis v. Gamage, 18 Mass., 346.)

In De Mets v. Dagron, 53 N. Y., 635, an attorney was authorized to collect the debt of his principal and execute a discharge of such debt. Instead of collecting the debt in money he took a promissory note of the debtor payable to his principal’s order in payment of a judgment in favor of his principal and against the debtor and released such judgment, and the court held that the attorney exceeded his authority, and the discharge of the judgment did not bind his principal.

In Miller v. Edmonston, 8 Blackf. [Ind.], 290, an attorney held three notes for collection belonging to his client signed by A and B. The attorney had no special instructions. He took a note from B for the amount of the three notes of A and B and surrendered the three notes to B, and then, at his request, B confessed a judgment in favor of the attorney’s client on the note given by him; and the court held that the attorney had exceeded his authority and that his conduct was not binding upon his client. The court said: “'When a demand is [832]*832placed in the hands of an attorney at law for collection without any special instructions the authority conferred upon a.nd the duty assumed by him is to use due diligence to collect the debt by suit or otherwise-. He has no authority to compromise with the debtor and cannot bind his principal by any arrangement short of an actual collection of the money.” (Hamrick v. Combs, 14 Neb., 381; Smith v. Jones, 41 Neb., 108; Moore v. Pollock, 50 Neb., 900.)

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
71 N.W. 724, 51 Neb. 828, 1897 Neb. LEXIS 369, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cram-v-sickel-neb-1897.