Gibson v. Snow Hardware Co.

94 Ala. 346
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 94 Ala. 346 (Gibson v. Snow Hardware Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gibson v. Snow Hardware Co., 94 Ala. 346 (Ala. 1891).

Opinion

McCLELLAN, J.

— This action is prosecuted by the J. Snow Hardware Company against Mrs. Gibson, for the price or value of materials alleged to have been supplied to her, to be used, and which were used, in the construction of an opera-house in the city of Tuskaloosa. Several witnesses testified that the items of the account were all used in the erection of the house, while one witness for the defendant, John Brady, who was the architect and superintended the erection, deposed that “the [349]*349account [sued on] is. not correct, as there are several overcharges and charges for material that never went into the construction of the opera-house,” &c., &c., going on to specify certain material and articles charged on the account which were not received for or used in the building. We have nothing to do with the weight of the evidence on the respective sides of this issue. Suffice it for us that there was some evidence upon either hand, thus making the question one for the jury. Going to this issue, the plaintiff was allowed to prove the size of the house, the value or amount of material necessary to its construction, and the value of the labor put upon it, against defendant’s objection. This evidence would probably tend to induce the mind of a layman to the conclusion that all the material charged for was supplied, since that amount of material, or even more, was needed in the building. Hence we can not affirm that, if the ruling of the court was erroneous,it involved no injury to the defendant. That it was erroneous is, we think, clear. We are unable to see how the fact that more material than plaintiff claims to have sold could have been used in the construction of the opera-house, can have any legitimate tendency to prove that all the- material charged for and specified in the account sued on was in truth sold and delivered to the defendant, and used in the building. This would be to prove a sale by evidence of the vendee’s necessities, or his ability to utilize the thing alleged to have been sold. The testimony ought to have been excluded.

2. The inquiry of final importance in the case appears to be, whether, in legal contemplation, John Brady was the agent of the defendant, in the purchase of the materials which went into the building of the opera-house. There is no direct evidence that he was, since his own declaration to that effect can not, standing alone, be looked to. But the evidence on the part of the plaintiff goes to show that they had been selling goods to Brady for his mother, Mrs. Gibson, “ever since they had been in business, and that she had always paid for goods so sold.” It was in evidence, also, that Brady had prepared the plans and specifications for the opera-house; that lie was superintending its erection, seeing that the plans were executed and the specifications complied with, and in some instances changing the same; and that he was constantly at the building, supervising the work, &c. It also appeared, upon one aspect of the testimony, that at the commencement of the building, before indeed the work had been begun, he directed the plaintiff to let Allen, the contractor, have whatever was needed in the erection of the opera-house, and told the company’s officers that his mother would pay for material [350]*350so furnished; and that upon this direction and assurance the company,-beginning about Dec. 1, 1888, supplied between that time and March 18, 1889, the goods set out in the account sued on; that all these goods were charged to Mrs. Gibson; that on January 1, 1889, when the account amounted to about $375, a statement of it showing that the credit was given to her, and the charge made against her, was presented to Mrs. Gibson for payment, paid by her without objection, and the statement kept by her and produced on the trial. It further appears from plaintiff’s evidence that, on March 4, 1889, Mrs. Gibson had two accounts on its books, one known as the opera-house account, and the other as her individual account, the last being for less than $20; and that on that date she paid plaintiff the sum of $1<>0, with directions to satisfy the individual indebtedness and apply the balance to the payment of the opera-house account. Then, too, it appeared that she was much about the opera-house during the time plaintiff was delivering material there, and had in consequence abundant opportunity to know that the company was supplying such material; and that she received the benefit in the erection of the opera-house. Now these facts — the previous dealings by her with the plaintiff', through Brady as her agent; Brady’s connection with the building of the opera-house; her frequent presence there during these transactions; the payments by her on plaintiff’s account for the materials furnished, with full knowledge that that account was made out against her, and without-, at least in the first and main instance, any objection — ■ were all proper to go to the jury as evidence of the agency of Brady, that the goods and wares so supplied went into the construction of her house, and to her benefit; and unexplained, or unqualified, it can not be doubted they were amply sufficient to authorize the jury to find the existence of the agency, and hold her liable accordingly. — 1 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, pp. 437-8 ; Scott v. Middletown R. R. Co., 4 Am. & Eng. R. R. Cases, 114; Herring v. Skeggs, 73 Ala. 446 ; Bearce v. Bowker, 115 Mass. 129; Tabler, Crudup & Co. v. Sheffield Land, Iron & Coal Co., 87 Ala. 305; Central R. R. of Ga. v. Cheatham, 85 Ala. 292; Singer Manufacturing Co. v. Belgart, 84 Ala. 219.

3. All these facts being properly before the jury, it was of course open to the defendant- to overcome the evidence tending to establish them, either by evidence in flat contradiction and denial, or by way of explanation and qualification, going to rebut the inferences apparently afforded by the testimony in chief that Brady was her agent. Whether the evidence thus afforded by the defendant in denial of her knowledge that [351]*351plaintiff was furnishing the material and charging it to her, and in denial of Brady’s authority to bind her, and in explanation of the payments made by her, so as to deprive her acts in that regard of any probative force in establishing a ratification by her, was sufficient to overcome the case made by the plaintiff, was manifestly a question for the jury. Upon the issue thus presented, the triers of fact were at liberty to reach either of the two possible conclusions — that Brady was, or was not, the agent of Mrs. Gibson in and about the erection of the opera-house and the purchase of material therefor. The jury having before them the evidence upon which it was competent to find the fact ol such agency, it was of course not only proper, but essential, that evidence of Brady’s direction to plaintiff to supply the material, and assurance that his mother would pay for it, should go to them to be looked to, in the event they found that Brady was her agent, for the purpose of ascertaining, declaring and enforcing the obligation Mrs. Gibson took upon herself through him. Nay more, there being evidence before the jury tending to prove the agency,’ or to make out a prima facie case thereof, it was then- competent to prove all the acts and declarations of Brady in and about the business, — and among the rest his declaration that he was defendant’s general agent, — and submit it all to the jury. — Mechem on Agency, § 107; Reynolds v. Collins, 78 Ala. 94; Martin, Dumee & Co. v. Brown, Shipley & Co., 75 Ala. 442.

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Bluebook (online)
94 Ala. 346, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gibson-v-snow-hardware-co-ala-1891.