Graham & Co. v. Duckwall, Fitch & Co.

71 Ky. 12, 5 Ky. Op. 495, 1871 Ky. LEXIS 476, 8 Bush 12
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 9, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 71 Ky. 12 (Graham & Co. v. Duckwall, Fitch & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Graham & Co. v. Duckwall, Fitch & Co., 71 Ky. 12, 5 Ky. Op. 495, 1871 Ky. LEXIS 476, 8 Bush 12 (Ky. Ct. App. 1871).

Opinions

JUDGE PETERS

delivered the opinion oe the court.

This action was brought by appellants, wholesale grocers in the city of Philadelphia, against appellees, grocers in that part of the city of Louisville known as Portland, to recover of them $1,130.18, the price of a bill of goods sent to them by appellants, of which a bill of particulars is filed and made part of the petition, dated December 4, 1867.

Appellees in their answer deny that they ever purchased a bill of goods of appellants at any time whatever, and deny that they owe them $1,130.18, or any part thereof, or any sum of money whatever. But state that some time in November, or early'in December, 1867, Cutter, Bement & Co., doing business as commission merchants in Louisville, called on them at their place of business in Portland, and offered to sell them coffee and syrup by sample on thirty days’ time, and exhibited to them the samples of the articles they proposed to sell, informing them that they did not have the articles which they proposed to sell them in store; but said they had them somewhere in the East, and it would be about two weeks before they could deliver them; that they told said Cutter, Bement & Co., if their coffee and syrup corresponded with the samples, they would take .a specified quantity of each at the price at which they offered them; that the goods were shipped to them by rail, a part from New York and a part from Philadelphia; but that they did not receive with them, nor by mail or other[15]*15wise, any account or letter of advice to inform them that said goods were the property of any other person than Cutter, Bement & Go.; and at the expiration of thirty days, the time on which they made the purchase, they paid Cutter, Bement & Co. $1,127.18, the price which they agreed and promised to pay for said goods.

They further state that when they purchased the goods they believed Cutter, Bement & Co. were the owners; that no other person or persons were disclosed to them as the owners; and they paid them therefor, believing at the time that they alone had the right to receive the price.

By an amended petition appellants charge that Cutter, Bement & Co. were merchandise brokers, and as such sold the goods to appellees, and by their letter, under date December 2, 1867, informed them of the sale, and directed the shipment of the goods, -which letter with a duplicate of the bill of lading and bill of goods they file with their amended petition.

In their answer to the amended petition appellees deny that Cutter, Bement & Co. sold them the goods as brokers, or that they had any knowledge or information sufficient to form a belief as to whether or not they were brokers.” They allege that Cutter, Bement & Co. did business on Third Street in Louisville, where they advertised themselves as commission merchants and auctioneers; they deny that they had any knowledge, or information sufficient to form a belief that said Cutter, Bement & Co. were brokers, or sold the goods as appellants’ agents, and deny that they ever received a bill of the goods or a bill of lading.

After the pleadings were made up the issues of fact were submitted to a jury, who found a verdict for appellees, and a new trial having been refused by the court below, a judgment was rendered in conformity to the verdict, from which this appeal is prosecuted.

When the evidence was closed three instructions were asked [16]*16by appellants, all of which were refused, and two given which were asked by appellees; and whether the court erred in refusing and giving instructions is the important question in this case.

For appellants it is insisted that Cutter, Bement & Co. acted in the sale of the goods to appellees as merchandise brokers, and not as factors or commission merchants; and that as the goods were sold by samples, and appellees were informed at the time of sale that they were not in the possession of Cutter, Bement & Co., but were in the East, and were to be shipped and delivered to them in two weeks thereafter, the law will infer that they knew the goods belonged to other parties, and if they paid the price to Cutter, Bement & Co., they did it at their own risk.

The correctness of this position is controverted by appellees, and they contend' that as the party who made the sale to them did not disclose the character in which he acted they had a right to infer that he was the owner of the goods, or at most that as Cutter, Bement & Co. were doing a business under a sign as commission merchants and auctioneers, in dealing with them the law would imply that they acted in the transaction as factors; and if in the latter capacity, a payment to them would be binding on the owners.

As the evidence was conflicting, and the jury have made a verdict, we can not disturb their finding, and unless the court below ei’red in giving or withholding instructions, or in the admission or rejection of evidence, the judgment must stand.

Mr. Justice Story, in his work on Agency, section 28, defines a broker to be an agent employed to make bargains and contracts between other persons, in matters of trade, commerce, or navigation, for a compensation, commonly called brokerage; or in the language of Lord Chief Justice Tindal, a broker is one who makes a bargain for another, and receives a commission for so doing.” And Justice Story further says: [17]*17“Properly speaking, a broker is a mere negotiator between other parties, and never acts in his own name, but in the names of those who employ him. Where he is employed to buy or to sell goods he is not intrusted with the custody or possession of them, and is not authorized to buy or sell them in his own name. He differs from a factor in some very important particulars. A factor may buy and sell in his own name, as well as in the name of his principal; a factor is intrusted with the possession, management, control, and disposal of the goods to be bought or sold, and has a special property in them, and a lien on them. A broker, on the contrary, usually has no such possession, management, control, or disposal of the goods, and consequently has no such special property or lien.” (lb., sec. 34.)

If a broker sell the goods of his principal in his own name (without some special authority so to do), inasmuchc-as he exceeds his proper authority, the principal will have the same rights and remedies against the purchaser as if his name had been disclosed by the broker. (lb., sec. 28.)

In sec. 109 Justice Story, in the same work, says: “A broker employed to buy or sell goods without limitation of price has the incidental authority to bind his principal by any price at which he honestly buys or sells. So a broker authorized to sell goods without any express restriction as to mode may sell the same by sample or with warranty. Ordinarily he can not make the contract in his own name, but ought to do it in the name of his principal. So he can not buy or sell on credit except in cases justified by the usages of trade. So a broker has ordinarily no authority virtute offioii to receive payment for property sold by him; and if payment is made to him by the purchaser it is at his own risk, unless from other circumstances the authority can be inferred.”

But factors stand in a different relation to their principals. The same author, in section 110, says: “Factors may sell the [18]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
71 Ky. 12, 5 Ky. Op. 495, 1871 Ky. LEXIS 476, 8 Bush 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graham-co-v-duckwall-fitch-co-kyctapp-1871.