Eddy v. American Amusement Co.

132 P. 83, 21 Cal. App. 487, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 286
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 15, 1913
DocketCiv. No. 1295.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 132 P. 83 (Eddy v. American Amusement Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eddy v. American Amusement Co., 132 P. 83, 21 Cal. App. 487, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 286 (Cal. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

SHAW, J.

This is an action to recover damages for breach of contract alleged to have been made by defendant with plaintiff. The court gave judgment for defendant, from which plaintiff appeals. The alleged contract upon which the action is based is one whereby defendant employed plaintiff and his family as acrobatic and high-wire performers for the season of 1907. The contract, in duplicate, was executed on December 13, 1906, at Chihuahua, Mexico, by plaintiff and one William Sells, who purported to act for and on behalf of defendant, signing defendant’s name thereto by himself as manager. At the time of the execution thereof, Sells delivered one copy to plaintiff, retaining the other in his possession until after this controversy arose, when he delivered the same to plaintiff. Defendant claims that Sells had no authority to make the contract in its name.

The contention of appellant is that Sells, if not as actual agent of defendant empowered to execute the contract, nevertheless, had ostensible authority so to do; that if lacking in such authority, his act in making the contract was ratified by defendant and H. H. Tammen, its general manager, who *489 did have power to make the same. As- to this and other contentions, the court found against plaintiff, and on this appeal he attacks these findings upon the ground of insufficiency of the evidence to support them.

In support of his claim counsel for appellant quote at great length from affidavits read at the hearing of a motion to reopen the case. In no sense can these affidavits he deemed evidence touching the facts so found, and therefore the lengthy excerpts therefrom must, in considering the evidence supporting the findings, he wholly disregarded.

It appears that defendant was the owner of a traveling circus, known as “The Sells-Floto Show,” the general office of which was in Denver, Colorado. One H. H. Tammen was general manager of the corporation, having full power for and on its behalf to engage performers and to make contracts with them for professional services, obligating the company to pay therefor. At the close of the season in Chihuahua, Mexico, December 12, 1906, William Sells was, and had been during the season, an employee of defendant under the name and title of director-general, and as such, as appears from the testimony on behalf of defendant, “had practically the entire business management, seeing that everything run along smoothly.” His duty was to assist the general manager, and, in his absence, to manage the show, having general direction of the performers, the loading and unloading of trains, the instructing of advance agents as to their billing and newspaper contracts and the execution thereof, and when authorized in writing so to do by Tammen, to make contracts of employment with performers and actors for services to be rendered during the season and to discharge them for cause if their performance was not as contracted. In the fall of 1905 Sells had written plaintiff, offering to engage him and his family for defendant, signing the letter “William Sells, Director-General of The American Amusement Co.,” and plaintiff and his family had been with the circus as acrobatic and high-wire performers during the season of 1906, under a contract made in the early part of the season with Sells acting for and on behalf of the company. The general manager was not in Mexico when the contract was made, having left the show six days prior to such time. Now, while Sells was vested with these powers and, with de *490 fendant’s knowledge, exercised the same without, other than in this instance, the disapproval of defendant, or its general manager, the evidence conclusively shows that ■ it was privately understood between Sells and the defendant that his acts were'Subject to the approval of H. H. Tammen, general manager, under whom he acted and to whom, or to defendant at Denver, he was required to report the same.

Upon counsel for defendant stating they would show that •plaintiff had knowledge of such limitations so placed upon the powers of Sells, the objection of plaintiff to the introduction of evidence showing this private understanding between Sells and defendant was by the court overruled. “Where the special character of the agency is not known and the principal has clothed the agent with apparent powers, strangers in dealing with the agent may assume that such apparent powers are possessed. The principal cannot by private communications with his agent limit the authority which he allows the agent to assume.” (Clark on Contracts, p. 734; Robinson v. American Fish etc. Co., 17 Cal. App. 212, [119 Pac. 388]; Leavens v. Pinkham & McKevitt, 164 Cal. 242 [128 Pac. 399].) In the absence of any evidence tending to show that plaintiff had knowledge of this private agreement, the facts, in our opinion, clearly establish ostensible authority (Civ. Code, sec. 2317) in Sells to make the contract and defendant is estopped from denying the same. Respondent, however, invokes the provisions of section 19 of the Civil Code, to the effect that notice of circumstances sufficient to put a prudent man upon inquiry as to a particular fact is constructive notice of the fact itself, if by prosecuting such inquiry he might have learned of such fact, and insists that such circumstances were shown. The circumstances upon which respondent relies in support of its contentions are, that weeks before the making of the contract it was agreed between the general manager and Sells that the latter would not be employed by defendant during the season of 1907, and that such fact was generally known around the show; that in making the contract the parties used a printed form adopted by defendant which contained a provision to the effect that, upon conditions specified therein, either party might terminate the agreement upon notice; that this provision was stricken out and a provision inserted that the engagement of plaintiff and his *491 family for the season of 1907 should not be less than thirty weeks; that it was the custom of circuses in making contracts with actors to insert a provision for the termination of such contracts upon notice. As made the contract further provided that plaintiff and his family in traveling with the show should have the use of a stateroom and not be required to take part in parades. Otherwise, so far as we are advised, the contract as executed was in accordance with the printed form used by defendant. There was nothing upon the form of contract indicating that to make it legal and binding upon defendant it should be signed, countersigned, or approved by H. H. Tammen, general manager. While the season closed on December 12, 1906, at which time Sells and others were paid their salaries, he continued in the employ of defendant, having charge of the circus, which he conducted to its winter quarters at Venice, California, plaintiff and his family accompanying the show to the place where they took up winter quarters. On December 13, 1906, a benefit was given to Sells, the performers contributing their services and defendant contributing the circus paraphernalia, which contribution on the part of defendant was the consideration paid Sells for his continued services in conducting the show to Venice, California.

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Bluebook (online)
132 P. 83, 21 Cal. App. 487, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 286, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eddy-v-american-amusement-co-calctapp-1913.