Greene v. Goddard

50 Mass. 212
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1845
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 50 Mass. 212 (Greene v. Goddard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Greene v. Goddard, 50 Mass. 212 (Mass. 1845).

Opinion

Hubbard, J.

As the defendant’s name does not appear on the bills of exchange drawn by the plaintiffs upon Messrs. T Wiggin & Co., he cannot be liable for any damages arising to the plaintiffs in consequence of the non-payment of the bills by the acceptors, unless upon some separate agreement existing between him and the plaintiffs. If the plaintiffs [220]*220were merely vendors of goods to the defendant, and took the written authority of the agent of Wiggin & Co. to draw on them for £6000, in payment therefor, then they have no claim on the defendant; but their remedy, if they have any, can only be against Wiggin & Co., who authorized them to draw the bills. The first inquiry, therefore, which presents itself is, what was the relation which existed between the plaintiffs and defendant in regard to the transactions out of which the present suit has arisen ; whether the plaintiffs were merchants acting on their own account, or agents of the defendant, and transacting business on his account.

The agreement of Wiggin & Co., of March 1st 1836, in consequence of which the bills were drawn, was made.by their agent, Hooper, with the defendant, in Boston; and it contained an authority for the plaintiffs (Russell & Co.) to draw bills of exchange at Canton, at six months’ sight, on T. Wiggin & Co., London, for account of the defendant; which bills, so drawn by the plaintiffs, the agent of Wiggin & Co. engaged should be duly honored, if drawn within twelve months from the date of the letter. In consideration of this credit thus opened for his account, to be used in Canton, by the plaintiffs, the defendant agreed to remit to Wiggin & Co. sufficient funds to meet the payment of all bills which might be drawn by virtue of that credit, and to give security for the amount, to the satisfaction of Hooper, the agent, at any time when required. This credit was enclosed in a letter to the plaintiffs, bearing the same date with the credit; and the letter states that the credit is remitted to them to be used for his account, and that he wishes the plaintiffs to invest the proceeds in silks and teas, or in such articles as their judgment shall dictate as suitable for the Boston market, and at the lowest rate of freight they can contract for in a first rate vessel. This letter was received by the plaintiffs, and in consequence of it, they negotiated the exchange in the months of August and October 1836, the net proceeds of which, after deducting their commissions, they credited to the defendant, and charged him with an invoice of silks and teas, in October, and which they shipped to his address.

[221]*221These transactions do not disclose a sale of the credit to the plaintiffs, and a purchase of goods of them in payment, and thus leaving the plaintiffs to dispose of the bills for their own account; but the plaintiffs, by this letter and their acts under it, were constituted and became the agents of the defendant for the disposition of the exchange for his use and benefit, and for the purchase of goods for his account. The letter is an authority to sell the bills for his account, and to invest the proceeds in "goods for him. He thus constitutes them his agents, for this purpose, and they accept the appointment ; and he is the principal in the transaction. And though their services áre compensated by a commission, yet their relations with the defendant do not cease by the mere disposing of the bills and the purchase of the goods. If bills had been drawn by the defendant, and rendered negotiable by the names of others as payees and indorsers, and the plaintiffs were not required, in the negotiation, to put their names upon the bills, the agency would have been determined on the disposing of the drafts, and the purchasing and shipping of the goods, with the necessary accounts and documents. But the credit of Wiggin & Co. did not contain an authority for the defendant to draw the bills; but the plaintiffs alone could draw them. In sending the credit, then, to the plaintiffs, to be used by them, the defendant, in fact, requested them to draw the bills in their own names, but to negotiate them on his account; and consequently the drawing of the bills by the plaintiffs was for the benefit and at the risk of the defendant. Their names were given for his use and benefit, and, as between themselves and the defendant, as his agents. He therefore became responsible to the plaintiffs to protect them, as the drawers of the bills for him, from all losses by reason of so drawing, not proceeding from their own negligence or default. To the parties who should take the bills, they became responsible as the drawers, if the drawees should fail to accept, or refuse to pay them, not only for the face of the bills, but for the damages arising from their non-acceptance or non-payment. And though they might perhaps have a [222]*222claim on Wiggin & Co. for not accepting the bills, or not paying them, if accepted, still they were not confined to that quarter for relief, but had a right to look to their employer and principal for indemnity. Where an agent, in pursuing the instructions of his principal, and acting within the scope of his authority, becomes personally liable for the performance of the contract he makes for his principal, and without which personal liability the orders of the principal cannot be executed at all, or not so well executed, and this is known by the principal at the time of giving his instructions and creating the agency, if a loss occur to the agent, it is most clear that he can look to the principal for indemnity for the damage sustained by him. And this rests upon those sound principles of common sense and mutual justice in the transaction of business, upon which the law merchant, in its various branches, is founded; and which law, as it regulates and prescribes the rights and duties of principal and agent, alike furnishes protection to the agent, when he suffers loss through fidelity to his employer, and gives redress to the principal who sustains an injury from the breach of orders or neglect of duty by the agent. In Ramsay v. Gardner, 11 Johns. 439, the plaintiff indorsed a bill drawn by the defendant. The indorsement was made by the plaintiff, as agent for the defendant. The bill was returned, and the plaintiff, as indorser, paid it, with the postages, protests and twenty per cent, damages. He brought his action to recover the sums so paid; and the court held that as he had acted as the agent of the defendant, and without benefit to himself, the money which he had paid was paid for his principal, and that he was entitled to recover. So in Stocking v. Sage, 1 Connect. 522, the court held that an agent, who, in acting faithfully for his principal, is subjected to expense, is to be reimbursed; and that if he is sued on a contract made pursuant to his authority, the law implies a promise- by the principal to indemnify him. So in D’Arcy v. Lyle, 5 Binn. 441, the court approved the doctrine of the civil law, that where damages are incurred by an agent, in the management of the business of his principal, or in conse [223]*223quence of it, the principal is responsible to him for the damages so incurred. See also Powell v. Trustees of Newburgh, 19 Johns. 284. Child v. Morley, 8 T. R. 610. So in Riggs v. Lindsay,

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Bluebook (online)
50 Mass. 212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greene-v-goddard-mass-1845.