Kopan v. Minneapolis Threshing Machine Co.

166 N.W. 826, 39 N.D. 27, 1918 N.D. LEXIS 15
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 6, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 166 N.W. 826 (Kopan v. Minneapolis Threshing Machine Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kopan v. Minneapolis Threshing Machine Co., 166 N.W. 826, 39 N.D. 27, 1918 N.D. LEXIS 15 (N.D. 1918).

Opinion

Grace, J.

This action is brought by the plaintiff against the defendant for the purpose of recovering commissions claimed to be due the-plaintiff by reason of his services claimed to be rendered to the defendant by assisting in rendering services to the defendant by, through, and under the direction of one Wood, the general manager for the defendant for a certain territory including part of North Dakota, part of Minnesota, and other territory; to one Gunderson, who purchased a Minneapolis separator from the defendant at the general office for such territory, which said office is located at Grand Forks, North Dakota.

The complaint is in the ordinary form for such kind of actions. The answer is in the form of a general denial, with the exception that it admits it is a foreign corporation.

The facts in the case are substantially as follows: The defendant is a foreign corporation, with its principal office at Hopkins, Minnesota. The defendant has an office at Grand Forks, North Dakota, which is the headquarters of the defendant for a large part of North Dakota and part of Minnesota and Montana. Mr. Wood is in the employ of' the defendant, and as such employee has charge of the head office of the defendant at Grand Forks, and at the time of this action, and for several years prior thereto, had been the general manager of such territory. The defendant, in disposing of fits machinery, does so largely through local agents located in some of the various towns within the territory. The general manager has charge of the territory. It appears it was part of his business and duty to make contracts with local dealers for the sale of the machinery of the defendant, and to submit such contracts to the home office at Hopkins, Minnesota, for [32]*32approval. His further duties were to make contracts with collectors, and to have supervision of other matters within his territory. It appears, also, that Wood as such general manager had charge of the sales of the machinery of the defendant within his territory, and had the authority to sell machines and to assist in making sales of machines within the territory. It appears that Wood, the manager of the head office at Grand Forks, North Dakota, had the right, authority, and duty to sell machines and to have supervision over the selling of the machines, and that he could also sell to persons desiring to purchase his machines even in a territory where there was a local agent of the defendant, where the purchaser did not desire, or for some reason would not, purchase from the local dealer.

In the summer of 1916, in June or July, the appellant went to the head office at Grand Forks and asked for the general manager, Mr. Wood, who appeared and talked with the appellant. The appellant informed Mr. Wood, the general manager, that he had a prospect then in the city to purchase a separator. Appellant inquired from Wood, the general manager, if he would be willing to pay him something if the appellant brought a customer for a separator, who purchased a separator. Mr. Wood told the appellant that depended on who the party was, and where he was from, -whether he could give him anything or not. Kopan testified that “he [Wood] asked me where the mail was from, and I told him he was from Leeds county, and he said, ‘We have an agent there.’ ” Appellant then said: “This man won’t deal with your agent up there. He seems to have a sore spot somewhere or other, and he says he won’t deal with him.” Mi’. Wood says, “Well, in that case we can get around it and allow you what it is worth to make the sale.” Mr. Wood denies that he used the words, “we can get around it and allow you what it is worth.” Wood, the general manager, in effect claims that, before Kopan could be allowed any commission, he would have to enter into a salesman’s contract with respondent, which contract would have to be approved in the home office.

The main question in this case is whether Wood, the general manager for the territory above mentioned, with office at Grand Forks, North Dakota, had the authority and power to make the agreement which it is apparent that he did make with Kopan, and thereby bind [33]*33his principal, the defendant, for the payment of the commission claimed to be earned by the appellant. If Wood, the general manager, had either the authority or power to enter into such agreement or arrangement, and the appellant acted upon and in pursuance of such agreement or arrangement, and thereby furnished or procured for the defendant a purchaser of the separator in question, with whom the sale was consummated, then the defendant is liable for the payment of such commissions as the appellant shows himself entitled to. There is no dispute but what Mr. Wood is general manager for a certain territory heretofore mentioned. We are of the opinion that this fact is. fully established by the testimony.

The authority and power of Mr. Wood, the general manager, may be divided into two main divisions: (1) His authority and power to make contracts with the local agents in his territory, subject to the approval of the company; (2) the authority and power to sell from the main office machinery of his company, to supervise and look after salesmen and collectors, and to look after and file papers necessary to be filed, taken in settlement for machinery sold within the territory assigned to the general manager, Mr. Wood.

The respondent in its brief admits the authority and power of the general manager to sell threshing machines direct from the office at Grand Forks. Kespondent’s brief with respect to this matter reads as follows: “The only authority possessed by Mr. Wood, other than securing- agents in the manner outlined, was to sell threshing machines direct from the office in Grand Forks, and to have charge of salesmen and collectors employed throughout his territory. That is, charge in the sense that he directed them where to go and what to do.”

The respondent really concedes that Mr. Wood, the general manager, had no authority to appoint agents otherwise than as heretofore stated, and that the appellant was not so appointed. The agreement which Nop an had with Mr. Wood, the general manager, was not an agreement made by an agent appointed in the manner required by defendant. The appellant, strictly speaking, was not regularly and according to the requirement of defendant’s agency contract really appointed defendant’s agent. But oven if it be true that appellant was not properly appointed defendant’s agent and his appointment [34]*34confirmed by the defendant, this alone does not prevent appellant’s right of recovery in this case.

A more serious question presents itself when we consider the right, power, and authority of Mr. Wood, the general manager, to make sales of threshing machines or the machinery of the defendant direct from the office at Grand Forks. It is conceded that such general manager had such right. If the general manager had such right, authority, and power, he also had the right to do all that was necessary, proper, and useful in the ordinary course of such business for the purpose of effecting the sales of threshing machines, or the machinery of his company, which was sold from the head office at Grand .Forks.

Section 6340, Oomp. Laws 1913, reads as follows: “An agent has authority: 1. To do everything necessary or proper and useful in the ordinary course of business for effecting the purpose of his agency, and, 2.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
166 N.W. 826, 39 N.D. 27, 1918 N.D. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kopan-v-minneapolis-threshing-machine-co-nd-1918.