Hendrickson v. International Harvester Co. of America

135 A. 702, 100 Vt. 161, 1927 Vt. LEXIS 132
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedJanuary 8, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 135 A. 702 (Hendrickson v. International Harvester Co. of America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hendrickson v. International Harvester Co. of America, 135 A. 702, 100 Vt. 161, 1927 Vt. LEXIS 132 (Vt. 1927).

Opinion

Powers, J.

In this action of contract, the plaintiff seeks to recover damages on account of the defendant’s failure to deliver to him an eight-foot broadcast seeder pursuant to the contract hereinafter referred to. Trial below was in the Montpelier city court,where the plaintiff had judgment on a verdict in his favor. The defendant brings the case here on exceptions.

On or about the 28th day of June, 1921, P. J. Hill, D. G. S. Bushnell, and John O. Hood went to the plaintiff’s farm in Plainfield, and proposed to sell him any farm machinery he might require. He finally made an arrangement with them to exchange a drill seeder which he then owned for a.n eight-foot broadcast seeder, the same to be delivered to him the following spring, when he was to pay ten dollars in cash. By direction of Hill, the plaintiff delivered his drill seeder to Hood, but has never paid the ten dollars, and has never received the broadcaster. He seeks to hold the defendant on the ground that Plood, Hill, and Bushnell were its agents in the transaction, duly authorized to make the exchange in its behalf. The defendant denies their agency and authority, and that of each of them, and insists that there is no evidence in the transcript, which is before us, warranting a submission of the question of agency to the jury, and one of the exceptions here relied upon was saved to the overruling of its motion for a verdict.

So far as Hood’s relation to the defendant is concerned, the evidence stood in this way: He was engaged in the business of selling the defendant’s goods at East Barre. He was improved as a witness for the plaintiff, and when, in direct examination, he was asked if, at the time in question, he was the agent of the defendant, he replied, “I was, a dealer, that’s what they call it.” It is obvious that the true meaning of this answer depends largely on the way it is punctuated. Omit one comma, and it would be, “I was a dealer, that’s what they call it. ’ ’ But the transcript gives the answer as. first above written, and we accept it in that way. Standing alone, uncontradicted and unexplained, this answer would, in the circumstances, tend, to show that the relation of principal and agent existed between Hood and the defendant. But it later appeared that that rela *165 tion was evidenced by a written contract between them. The defendant offered to show just what that contract was, but the evidence was rejected and the defendant excepted. This was prejudicial error. The evidence would have shown that Hood Avas a so-called sales agent, only; that is to say, he bought and sold the defendant’s goods on his own account and not otherwise; Avhich, as was held in Piper v. Oakland Motor Co., 94 Vt. 211, 214, 109 Atl. 911, does not establish an agency at all. It is true that the offer was not of the contract itself, nor of a copy of it in the usual sense of the term, but of the contract for the following year, 1922. But the uncontradicted testimony was that the contract offered was exactly’ like the one in force in 1921, except as to date and some minor details not important here, and that the contract of 1921 had been destroyed. In these circumstances the paper offered was admissible, as is fully shoAAm by Barnet v. Norton, 90 Vt. 544, 548, 99 Atl. 238.

It Avas conceded that Hill and Bushnell were there in the defendant’s employ; but their authority to make this contract or any other contract of like character for and on behalf of the defendant is denied. Subject to the defendant’s objection and exception, the plaintiff was allowed to testify that Hill said that they were selling farm machinery for the defendant. Nothing in the law is better settled than that agency cannot be proved by the mere declarations of the alleged agent made out of court. Sias v. Consolidated Lighting Company, 73 Vt. 35, 42, 50 Atl. 554; Prouty v. Nichols, 82 Vt. 181, 184, 72 Atl. 988, 137 A. S. R. 991. First National Bank v. Bertoli, 87 Vt. 297, 311, 89 Atl. 359, Ann. Cas. 1917B, 590; Taplin & Rowell v. Harris, 88 Vt. 15, 18, 90 Atl. 956. But Avhere, as in the case at bar, it becomes necessary for a plaintiff to show that the contract in issue was in laiv the contract of one not a party to the negotiations, he may testify to whom he gave credit in making it, and how he happened to do so. McNeish v. Hulless Oat Co., 57 Vt. 316, 323; Wilder v. Hinckley Fibre Co., 97 Vt. 45, 48, 122 Atl. 428. This plaintiff very properly testified that he did not contract with Hood, but with the defendant, and in explanation and confirmation of this statement it was proper to show that the men referred to represented themselves as agents of the defendant. The evidence, then, for this purpose was admissible; and being admissible for one purpose it will be presumed that it was limited to that purpose, unless the record affirmatively shows the contrary. Limerick National Bank v. Adams, 70 Vt. 132, 141, *166 40 Atl. 166; Griffin v. Boston & Maine Railroad, 87 Vt. 278, 290, 89 Atl. 220. But our examination of the transcript before us shows that the court allowed the evidence to be considered on the question of agency as the basis of the action. He charged the jury that “the declaration of the agent himself, his own signature, is evidence to prove agency.” In saying this, we read the transcript as it stood when filed with our clerk,— August 3, 1926. As it now appears, there is a memorandum attached to the page on which the above instruction is dated September 16, 1926, signed by the reporter who made it, attempting to amend the transcript so that the instruction would read “The declaration of the agent himself is not sufficient evidence to prove agency. ’ ’ So far as shown, no authority for such amendment was granted by or known to the court allowing the bill, or otherwise. Here, then, is an unauthorized attempt to make a material change in the transcript after it had become a part of the record in this Court. Assuming that a certified transcript can be amended after such filing, it may only be done by leave and under the direction of the authority signing the bill of exceptions, or by authority of this Court. Otherwise the attempted amendment will be treated as a mutilation of the record and be disregarded.

That the burden of proving the agency was on the plaintiff is undeniable. Citizens Savings Bank v. Jenkins, 91 Vt. 13, 23, 99 Atl. 250. That question when considered as a basis of recovery was for the jury; but when considered as a basis for the admission of the extrajudicial statements of the alleged agents, it was for the court. Chadwick v. Wiggin, 95 Vt. 515, 516, 116 Atl. 74; Gomes & Co. v. Hartwell, 97 Vt. 147, 153, 122 Atl. 461. So it remains to consider whether, excluding such admissions, there was evidence tending to establish the agency. For, if there was, then the admissions were receivable, in corroboration of such evidence. 2 C. J. 939; Lake Grocery Co. v. Chiostri 34 N. D. 386, 158 N. W. 998, 1002; Corona Coal & Iron Co. v. Callahan, 202 Ala. 649, 81 So. 591, 592; Worth v.

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Bluebook (online)
135 A. 702, 100 Vt. 161, 1927 Vt. LEXIS 132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hendrickson-v-international-harvester-co-of-america-vt-1927.