Marsh v. Gilbert

9 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 58
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1874
StatusPublished

This text of 9 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 58 (Marsh v. Gilbert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marsh v. Gilbert, 9 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 58 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1874).

Opinion

Boardman, J.:

About April 1, 1872, the defendants employed one Beaulac to repair their dock on Green Island near Troy, and defendants were to furnish the materials therefor. Beaulac called upon plaintiffs, who are lumber dealers at West Troy, to buy the necessary lumber for the defendants. The plaintiffs, having no confidence in Beaulac, who was unworthy of credit, went to see the defendants, and told them what Beaulac wanted and had ordered on their account. Mr. Gilbert, one of the defendants, replied, they (defendants) were going to build a dock or to repair a dock. Beaulac had agreed to do the work, and, if plaintiffs would furnish the timber, the defendants would pay them for it. Plaintiffs said, we will charge the lumber to you (defendants) and Gilbert said, all right. In fact, the contract between defendants and Beaulac at that time, was for the repair of a dock, but the referee’s findings, like the evidence, are contradictory.

In pursuance of such understanding, Beaulac, by the 25th of May, 1872, had ordered lumber and timber for docking, of the plaintiffs, to the value of $552.13, which had been delivered upon defendants’ premises. The repairs of the dock were completed on the thirteenth of April, and all of the timber -that was used for such repairs, was delivered before that date, and was of the value of $48.37. On the first of May, Beaulac made a new contract with defendants, to build about 300 feet of new dock, and furnish the materials. That work was completed about the twenty-fifth of [60]*60May, and, in such new dock, much of the lumber ordered by Beaulac of plaintiffs, was used.

From the first of April to the twenty-fifth of May, neither plaintiffs nor defendants had any knowledge or suspicion that Beaulac was getting lumber of plaintiffs on defendants’ account and credit without right or authority. Defendants had done nothing to advise plaintiffs of. the termination of Beaulac’s authority, and plaintiffs ■ had done nothing to ascertain the use which was being made by Beaulac of the lumber got of them, and delivered upon defendants’ premises.

On or about the twenty-fifth of May, Beaulac called upon plaintiffs for a bill for defendants. The bill was made out and taken away. Afterward, at Beaulac’s request, the account was made out in two bills, one including only the $48.37, and the other, the remainder of the account, but no reason for such request was assigned.

When plaintiffs and defendants met to settle the account, each party, for the first time, discovered that Beaulac had acted fraudulently and without authority, in continuing to get lumber of plaintiffs on defendants’ account after April thirteenth. The defendants, however, had paid Beaulac in full for building the new dock, and were not owing him anything. They therefore declined to pay anything beyond the $48.37. Plaintiffs brought action for the whole account. Upon the trial, the referee found for plaintiffs only the above sum of $48.37. As defendants had made an offer to allow judgment of $51, judgment for such first sum, with interest and costs before defendants’ offer, was given for the plaintiffs, and the defendants had judgment for their costs after the date of such offer.

The whole case shows that the parties were innocent of any design to do wrong. The whole mischief arises from the wrongful acts of Beaulac, in continuing to purchase lumber and timber of the plaintiffs upon defendants’ credit, after the repairs of the dock were finished, and while building defendants’ new dock. But Beaulac had in the meantime died insolvent. Flow, as between these innocent parties, who shall suffer the loss arising from Beaulac’s unwarranted conduct ?

If the act of Beaulac was within the terms of his authority, the defendants would be liable. If he had an apparent right during [61]*61the months of April and May, to buy docking timber of plaintiffs, upon the credit of defendants, such authority became real, though in excess of what was intended to be given. It was not incumbent upon the plaintiffs to inquire into the existence of facts outside their own knowledge, and peculiarly within the knowledge of the agent and his principal. The principal is bound by the acts of his agent within the apparent scope of his authority. When the defendants authorized Beaulac to buy upon their credit so much timber as he should want for a specific purpose, they made him their agent to determine the amount of lumber needed. It did not impose upon the plaintiffs the necessity of watching the timber to see that it went to that use, or to inform themselves when the purpose was accomplished.

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Bluebook (online)
9 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marsh-v-gilbert-nysupct-1874.