Edwards v. . Dooley

24 N.E. 827, 120 N.Y. 540, 31 N.Y. St. Rep. 710, 75 Sickels 540, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 1291
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 3, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by53 cases

This text of 24 N.E. 827 (Edwards v. . Dooley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Edwards v. . Dooley, 24 N.E. 827, 120 N.Y. 540, 31 N.Y. St. Rep. 710, 75 Sickels 540, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 1291 (N.Y. 1890).

Opinion

Brow®', J.

The principal contention of the appellant on this appeal is that the legal title to the hides in question was not in the respondents.

The court denied a motion to dismiss the complaint made on that ground, and it instructed the jury “ that if the hides * * * were bought by Ford or his agents with money furnished to him for that purpose by the plaintiffs, they were plaintiffs’ property at the time Ford pledged them.

That the plaintiffs became the owners of the hides as soon as they were paid for, whether or not Ford used for that purpose the specific proceeds of the drafts drawn upon the plain *548 tiffs, or used such proceeds for his own purposes and made up the amount by substituting other funds for such proceeds.”

These propositions stated correctly the law applicable to the case.

To recover in trover there must have been possession of the property by the plaintiffs, or there must be an existing right to take immediate actual possession of it.

Ford’s business at Ogden was to purchase hides for the plaintiffs. He had agreed to give them his entire services and engage in no other business or employment. Funds were placed in his possession to enable him to execute and perform that agreement, and if the hides in question were purchased by him in the performance of his contract, and paid for out of moneys furnished to him by the plaintiffs for that purpose, his acts were the plaintiffs’ acts, and the delivery to him of the hides was a delivery to the plaintiffs and vested the title and possession in them.

It is a well-settled principle of the law of agency that the agent is but the instrument of the principal, who acts by and through him. An individual assumes the relations, acquires the rights, and incurs the obligations which are the proper results of his acts, equally, whether he does those acts himself or through the medium of another. In either case the thing done is the act of the principal. The hides transferred to the defendants were all procured either from Parsons, Chase & Co. or from sources other than that firm. Ford, in violation of his agreement with plaintiffs, became a partner with Parsons, Chase & Co., and, to enable them to cany on their business, paid to them the proceeds of drafts he drew upon the plaintiffs. The money thus obtained was paid by plaintiffs to enable Ford to perform his contract with them. The consideration for the advance to Parsons, Chase & Co. was the future delivery of hides that would be taken from cattle slaughtered by that firm. The fact that the money thus supplied to Parsons, Chase & Co. was first used to purchase cattle which they slaughtered and that the dressed meat was sold by Ford at San Francisco, and the money resulting Horn such sales again *549 used to enable Parsons, Chase & Co. to carry on their business, does not necessarily alter the nature of the transaction between Ford, as plaintiffs’ agent, and Parsons, Chase & Co. with reference to the hides.

It may be that plaintiffs,’ if they had been cognizant of these dealings, might have repudiated them and recovered their money from Parsons, Chase &.Co., but it is equally true that third parties could not do that for them, and if plaintiffs do not complain of that manner of purchasing hides by their agent no one else can. In substance and effect, therefore, there was a sale of the hides hy Parsons, Chase & Co. to Ford in consideration of advances of money, and upon delivery of the hides, the contract was executed and the title and possession were in the plaintiffs.

The witness Johnston, who was a clerk for Ford after January 1, 1879, and during the whole period in which the hides in question were delivered to Ford, testified as follows: “All the money that was advanced to Parsons, Chase & Co. by Ford was advanced'to secure the hides that came off the cattle, and the cattle were generally bought by money obtained from Ford & Russel.”

“ During the time I was with Ford he never bought any hides and paid for any hides except with the direct proceeds of drafts drawn upon Edwards & Brackett.”

As to the hides procured elsewhere than from Parsons, Chase & Co., the evidence is of asimilar character. Johnston testified as to them as follows: “ Ford had two travelers out buying hides and shipping them in. He bought any hides that were offered at Ogden if they were cheap enough. Hides purchased by Ford were very seldom purchased oil credit. As a rule, unless they had been previously paid for by advances to the sellers, they were paid for in cash. Ford obtained the money which he paid for hides purchased by drawing drafts on Edwards & Brackett, and got the cash at the bank.”

It thus appears, without contradiction, that all the money paid for the hides pm-chased by Ford was fm-nished by the *550 plaintiffs, and as there was no claim that Ford was purchasing hides for any persons except the plaintiffs, the conclusion was permissible that they were purchased in the performance of his agreement with the plaintiffs. This conclusion is strengthened by the fact that the purchase of all the hides transferred to the defendants was reported by Eord to the plaintiffs in a detailed statement showing the number. of each kind, their weight, cost and where purchased, and there appears to be no contradiction of the testimony of Mr. Brackett that the plaintiffs paid for all the hides which Ford reported he had purchased.

After the transfer to the defendants a large quantity of hides were placed in the warehouse by Ford, all of which were paid for by the plaintiffs’ money. This evidence, if not absolutely conclusive, certainly permitted the jury, under the instructions of the court, to determine that the title to the hides was in the plaintiffs, and as the court refused to hold as a question of law that the hides were the property of plaintiffs, but allowed the jury to pass upon that question, the defendants had as favorable a ruling on the case as they could possibly have been entitled to.

It would be impossible, upon the evidence, to sustain the claim of the appellants that the title to any of the hides after their delivery to Ford at the warehouse at Ogden was in Parsons, Chase & Co., and the contention that the title was in Ford is opposed to well settled principles of the law of agency.

The learned counsel for the appellant has referred us to many cases holding that an agent purchasing property in his own name with trust funds is but a trustee for the principal, whose only remedy is to follow the property in a court of equity and fasten a trust upon it for his own benefit. But those authorities have no application to cases like the one under consideration, where the agent has purchased the very property which Ms principal authorized Mm to purchase. Here the act of purchasing is the act of the principal, and the title passes by the contract of sale from the seller to the principal.

*551 None of the other exceptions in the case can be sustained.

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Bluebook (online)
24 N.E. 827, 120 N.Y. 540, 31 N.Y. St. Rep. 710, 75 Sickels 540, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 1291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edwards-v-dooley-ny-1890.