Hatch v. Taylor

10 N.H. 538
CourtSuperior Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJuly 15, 1840
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 10 N.H. 538 (Hatch v. Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hatch v. Taylor, 10 N.H. 538 (N.H. Super. Ct. 1840).

Opinion

Parker, C. J.

It cannot be known, from the case before ps, whether the jury found that Clark did not exceed his authority in making the exchange ; or whether the verdict was based upon a ratification of the transaction, by the acts of the defendant afterwards. If, therefore, the instructions to the jury were not substantially correct upon either of these points, there must be a new trial.

There was sufficient evidence to warrant a finding that Clark, when he received the horses from the defendant, had an authority, of some description, given him respecting a sale or exchange of one or both of them. What this authority was, whether to sell or exchange, and what were the limitations upon it, or the instructions of the defendant relative to the manner of its execution, did not very clearly appear ; the .authority itself having been conferred verbally, and the evidence establishing its existence, and what was said about it, being derived mainly from the subsequent, and in some instances contradictory, declarations of the defendant himself.

The instructions to the jury take a distinction between the authority given to an agent, which he is not only bound to pursue, in duty to his principal, but a deviation from which will render his act void, (unless he has been held out, or en[543]*543abled to hold himself out, as having a different authority) and the instructions or directions which he may receive from his principal, relative to the manner in which he is to execute his authority, which are matters between the principal and agent, so that a disregard of them, by the latter, although it may make him liable to the principal, will not vitiate the act, if it be done within the scope of the authority itself.

It is very apparent that such a distinction must exist in some cases of agency, the particular instructions from the principal, relative to the circumstances under which the agent! is to act, being intended as directions for his guidance, but not operating as limitations upon the authority which is eon-ferred. Thus in case of a general agent, authorized to transact all business of a particular kind, although he can bind his employer only by acts within the scope of his authority, yet that authority is distinct from private orders or instructions relative to the mode in which it is to be executed ; and the latter cannot limit or impair the authority, or affect the rights of a party dealing with the agent, unless he had knowledge of such private instructions. The books so uniformly concur in establishing this principle, that it is unnecessary to cite authorities in support of it. Strangers cannot look to the private communications that may pass between a principal and his agent. 15 East 43, 408; 5 Bing. 442, (E. C. L. R. 500.)

But whatever was the extent of Clark’s authority in the present case, he was not a general, but a special, agent, authorized to make a sale, or exchange, of one or two horses only : and the question arises how far the same rule is applicable to agencies of that character.

To a very considerable extent, the principles applicable to general agencies apply also to those of a special and limited character. Thus the general principle, that the acts of the agent, within the scope of his authority, bind his employer | and that his acts beyond that point are void, unless the prim cipal has held him out, or enabled bim to hold himself out. [544]*544as having more enlarged powers than he actually possessed, or unless the employer ratifies his acts, is applicable to all classes of agencies.

It is contended, however, that the distinction between authority and instructions does not apply in cases of special agents ; and the defendant’s counsel rely particularly upon a treatise on Agency, recently published, which, it must be admitted, in some measure sustains their position.— Speaking of the nature and extent of the authority of agents, the author refers to “ the distinction commonly taken between the case of a general agent, and that of a special agent; the former being appointed to act in his principal’s affairs generally, and the latter to act concerning some particular object;” and says : “In the former case the principal will be bound by the acts of his agent within the scope of the general authority conferred on him, although he violates by those acts his private instructions and directions, which are given to him by the principal, limiting, qualifying, suspending or prohibiting the exercise of such authority under particular circumstances. In the latter case, if the agent exceeds his special and limited authority conferred on him, the principal is not bound by his acts ; but they become mere nullities, so far as he is concerned ; unless, indeed, he has held him out as possessing a more enlarged authority.” Story on Agency 115. The phraseology of this last clause is similar in substance to that of other elementary writers. 2 Kent's Com., Lecture 41; 1 Livermore on Agency 108. Taken strictly, as it stands, there can be no doubt of the correctness of the rule. If a special agent exceed his special and limited authority, without doubt the principal is not bound by his acts, unless he has held him out, or enabled him to hold himself out, as possessing a more enlarged authority. But from its connection with the preceding clause, and from its general connection with the context, this clause is understood as asserting that if a special agent exceeds the special and limited private instructions or directions which are given him [545]*545by the principal, limiting or qualifying, suspending or prohibiting the exercise of his agency under particular circumstances, the principal will not be bound, unless he has held the agent out as possessing a more enlarged authority than the right to act, coupled with the instructions, would give him. In other words, that instructions or directions to a special agent, notwithstanding they are private or secret, if intended to operate upon, and limit, qualify, suspend or prohibit the action of the agent, under certain circumstances, become part and parcel, and of the essence of the authority itself, so that the agent will not be acting within the scope of his authority, or apparent authority, if he disregard them. So it seems to be understood by the defendant’s counsel; and upon a subsequent page it is stated, that if a common person, not a factor, should be employed to make a sale, and he should violate his private instructions, and deviate from his authority in the sale, the principal would not be bound.” Story on Agency 122.

If this is so, there can be, ordinarily, no such thing as instructions, contra-distinguished from authority, in the case of a special agent ; as, whatever directions he receives respecting the mode and manner in which he is to perform his duties, will partake of the nature of authority, or qualification of authority, and limit or suspend his right to act, and to bind the principal, unless there has been some holding out of the agent as having an authority beyond the import of such directions.

But it is, we think, apparent enough, that all which may he said to a special agent, about the mode in which his agency is to be executed, even if said at the time that the authority is conferred, or the agency constituted, cannot be regarded as part,of the authority itself, or as a qualification or limitation upon it.

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Bluebook (online)
10 N.H. 538, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hatch-v-taylor-nhsuperct-1840.