Georgi v. . Texas Co.

122 N.E. 238, 225 N.Y. 410, 1919 N.Y. LEXIS 1140
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 28, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 122 N.E. 238 (Georgi v. . Texas Co.) 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
Georgi v. . Texas Co., 122 N.E. 238, 225 N.Y. 410, 1919 N.Y. LEXIS 1140 (N.Y. 1919).

Opinion

Crane, J.

This appeal touches upon the rule of election as between principal and agent for the recovery of goods sold. There is no misunderstanding about the law which is well settled by many authorities, but the difficulty has been its application to the facts of this case. Where goods have been sold to an agent whose agency and principal were not known and the claim has been prosecuted to a judgment, a recovery may nevertheless be had against the actual principal when the facts are disclosed. If, however, the creditor proceeds against the agent after full knowledge of thé agency and recovers a judgment, an action may not thereafter be maintained against the principal. The election to recover from the agent is then a bar to other proceedings.

The question of election implies full knowledge of the facts necessary to enable a party to make an intelligent and deliberate choice. (Lindquist v. Dickson, 98 Minn. 369.) Knowledge of the right to recover from the principal is essential before suit against the agent may be. regarded as an election to look to the latter, alone, for payment. Without knowing who the principal is or the fact of agency, an intelligent election is impossible. (Steele Smith Grocery Company v. Potthast, 109 Iowa, 413.) When a person contracts with another who is in fact an agent of an undisclosed principal,- he may upon discovery of the principal resort to him or to the agent with whom he dealt, at his election, but if after having come to a knowledge of all the facts he elects to hold the agent, he cannot afterwards resort to the principal AWhen a creditor after all the facts have become known to him obtains a judgment against the agent, this is an election to resort to the agent to whom the credit *413 was originally given and is a bar to an action against the principal. (Kingsley v. Davis, 104 Mass. 178.)

The following authorities also justify this statement of the rule: De Bemer v. Brown (165 N. Y. 410); Knapp v. Simon (96 N. Y. 284, 286); Tuthill v. Wilson (90 N. Y. 423); Cobb v. Knapp (71 N. Y. 348); Coleman v. First National Bank of Elmira (53 N. Y. 388); Meeker v. Claghorn (44 N. Y. 349); Sweeney v. Douglas Copper Company (149 App. Div. 569); Remmel v. Townsend (83 Hun, 353); Barrell v. Newby (127 Fed. Rep. 656).

As I have said, the law is well settled and understood, but its application to the facts of this case has led to a division in the court below. Doubt only arises as to one point and that is whether the plaintiff’s assignor had full knowledge of the facts entitling it to recover against the principal when it pursued its remedy and obtained judgment against the agent. The facts briefly are these: \

The Standard Paint Company of New Jersey in March, 1914, sold to the American Oil Cloth Company of the same state saturated felt for the sum of $2,399.91. In July, 1914, it brought action in the Supreme Court of New Jersey against the purchaser for the price and recovered judgment on the 13th day of October, 1914, for the full amount thereof. Execution was issued and returned unsatisfied. The judgment debtor was thereafter adjudicated a bankrupt in the District Court of the United States for the Southern District of New York, and the Standard Paint Company in March, 1915, filed its proof of claim for its debt existing upon said judgment.

The American Oil Cloth Company when it purchased the goods from the Standard Paint Company in March, 1914, was acting as agent for the defendant in this action, the Texas Company. Its authorization to make the purchase was contained in the following letter:

*414 “ The Texas Company
“ Petroleum and Its Products
Sales Department
“ C. E. Woodbridge, Manager.
“ New York, March 12th, 1914.
“ American Oil Cloth Company,
262 Canal Street,
“ New York City:
“ Dear Sirs.— Referring to conversation between Mr. Bimberg and the writer today, you may purchase for our account from the Standard Paint Company:
“ Five or six carloads of saturated -felt weighing two and one-half pounds per square yard, each carload to contain about three hundred rolls; price seven cents per square yard, f. o. b. your plant at Salem, N. J.; for shipment between date and March 25th, to April 1st.
“ I understand it will be necessary to have the material billed to the American Oil Cloth Company.
“ Please arrange to have bills sent to you after the same have been approved as to quality and quantity by the Salem Works, and have them handed to us for payment.
“We will bill the goods to the American Oil Cloth Company pursuant to our contract with you for saturated felt.. Very truly yours,
“ THE TEXAS COMPANY
“ CEW/LEW By C. E. Woodbridge.”

When sued as above stated in the Supreme Court of New Jersey, the American Oil Cloth Company filed an answer in which it pleaded that the goods were ordered in the name of and to be charged to the account of the Texas Company by its written authorization.

Louis J. Bimberg was secretary and treasurer of the American Oil Cloth Company at the times in question. In this action he was called as a witness for the plaintiff and testified that he brought the above letter and handed *415 it to the attorneys for the Standard Paint Company in September of 1914. Felix Jellenik, one of the attorneys, was also its secretary in that year. Bimberg also stated that he mentioned this fact about the Texas Company after the sale of the merchandise when payment was demanded.

On September 29th, 1914, the attorneys for the paint company wrote the following letter to the Texas Company, demanding payment for the goods sold to the American Oil Cloth Company:

Jellenik & Stern,
“ Counsellors at Law,
“111 Broadway, New York
“ Felix Jellenik
“ Nathan D. Stern. • September 29, 1914.
“ The Texas Company,
. “ 17 Battery Place,
“ City:

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Bluebook (online)
122 N.E. 238, 225 N.Y. 410, 1919 N.Y. LEXIS 1140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/georgi-v-texas-co-ny-1919.