McDermid v. Cotton

2 Ill. App. 297
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 15, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2 Ill. App. 297 (McDermid v. Cotton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McDermid v. Cotton, 2 Ill. App. 297 (Ill. Ct. App. 1878).

Opinion

Bailey, J.

This suit was brought by appellee to recover from appellants $425 in money placed in their hands by him, to be used in payment of margins on grain to be bought on speculation by them for him upon the Chicago Board of Trade. Appellee recovered a judgment in the court below for the full amount of said money and costs, whereupon appellants bring the record here, and allege that the court erred: first, in rejecting and receiving testimony; second, in its instructions to the jury; and third, in overruling appellants motion for a new trial.

Appellants, at the time of the transactions in question, were general commission and grain merchants, doing business in Chicago, on the Board of Trade.' Appellee, at the same time, was a resident of the State of Nebraska. Appellee seems to have been acquainted with appellants for a number of years prior to the transactions in question, and to have done business with them by way of consigning to them shipments of grain. On the 80th of October, 1877, appellee being desirous of embarking in a grain speculation through the agency of appellants telegraphed them as follows: “ When I think November or December wheat gets as low as I think it is going, I will order some sold. I will send margin.” On the 16th of November, following, he remitted to appellants $200, at the same time writing them as follows: “ Enclosed find draft for $200. I think I will order some December barley, but to-day it looks to me as though it would go up before long.”

On the 1st day of December, appellee remitted to appellants $225 more, and on the same day telegraphed them from Nebraska: “ When you think December wheat and corn have touched bottom, buy five of each,” meaning five thousand bushels of each. In reply, appellants, on December 3d, wrote appellee acknowledging the receipt of said dispatch, and saying: . “ Experience of long years has shown us that we cannot safely fill such orders. Our customers are too apt to say I bought it on your judgment, when it goes against them, and make this an excuse for not paying losses. Order us and we will fill your orders.” On the same day this letter was written, appellee wrote a letter to appellants, saying: “ I telegraphed you Saturday morning to buy me 5,000 December wheat and corn when you 'thought it had got down as low as you thought it could. Please use your best judgment to my advantage, and much oblige.”

Appellants’ letter of December 3d reached appellee December 5th or 6th, and on December 6th appellee telegraphed appellants: “ Buy me five December barley.” On the same day appellants replied by telegraph: “ Bought five barley sixty-three and a half.” The next day appellants sent to appellee a letter, by mail, in which they wrote: “We neglected to state yesterday that the barley we bought for you was January, and not December. December was, and is, being .freely delivered on this month’s sales, and therefore we thought it better and cheaper to buy you January, which cannot be delivered until-January comes. The market is easy to-day and dull, the interest being centered principally in wheat and corn. Barley is an article that will either make or lose money fast, and needs good'watching. Hoping it will make you some money, we are,” etc.

On the 8 th of December, appellee not having yet received appellants’ letter of December 7th, but supposing from their despatch of December 6th that his order to purchase December barley had been complied with, wrote them as follows: “ I telegraphed you the 6th to buy me 5,000 bushels December barley; received answer had bo’t at 63c. I see it is a little lower yesterday. I have a good deal of faith in December barley. Please watch it close, and if it begins to look too bad let me know.”'

On the same day on which this letter was written, appellee, . without having received appellants’ letter of December 7 th’, left home, and went to a place about forty-five miles from where he lived, and did not return until December 16th or 17th,. Finding, on his return, appellants’ letter of December 7th, and learning therefrom that appellants had bought for Mm January and not December barley, he wrote them December 17th, telling them that it was December barley that he ordered bought, and not January barley, and that he would not have anything to do with it as it was not what he ordered. In reply, appellants wrote him a letter dated December 20th, in which they say:

“Tour letter of the 17 th at hand, and we are surprised at the course you take in regard to the barley. You ordered 5 December barley bought, and we, to serve your interests, and to save you from having to pay for 5,000 cash barley, insurance, and interest, bought 'January instead, which is just as good for you, saved you expense, and is to-day as salable, or more so, than December. Uow that the market has declined a little you plead that you ordered December instead of January, and try to throw the deal on our hands. If yon will show us any good reason why January barley is not as good and better for you than December, we will make the difference good, or we will make it the same to you as December was selling at the time your January was purchased, but you cannot repudiate the purchase altogether, and we are surprised that you should attempt such a thing.”

To this letter no reply was made. The barley purchased was delivered to appellants January 16th, and the price having declined, they were compelled to sell at a loss, which, together with their commissions, amounted to §425, the precise sum placed in their .hands by appellee. The real question presented is whether under the circumstances above detailed appellants or appellee should be compelled to sustain the loss.

It is a plain and unquestionable principle of law that an agent is bound to pursue the orders of his principal and is answerable for any injury consequent on his departing therefrom, however fair may have been his motives for such departure. When his power is limited by instructions he is bound to pursue those instructions and if he deviate therefrom, though with a view to his employer’s interest, he will be liable for the consequences. If loss ensues, it furnishes no defense to Mm that he intended to benefit his principal, and on the other hand, if he thereby obtains an advantage or makes a profit, he will not be allowed to retain it, but must account to his principal for the whole, notwithstanding he bore the risk of failure.

Here, appellants were limited by their instruction received by telegraph from appellee December 6 th, to purchasing barley deliverable to the purchaser in the month of December, and if they acted at all it was their duty to obey that instruction. It left them no discretion. They were not at liberty to substitute something else, although it may in their judgment have been more advantageous to their principal for them to do so. Purchasing barley deliverable to the purchaser in the month of January, was a material departure from their 'instruction, and they had no power to bind their principal thereby.

It is insisted however, by appellants, that by virtue of previous letters from appellee, they had a discretion to act for him according to their own best judgment, notwithstanding the positive order of December 6th. This claim we think cannot be sustained. Appellee’s telegram of December 1st, and also his letter of December 3d, standing by themselves, would undoubtedly have vested such discretion in appellants.

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31 Ill. App. 517 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1889)

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Bluebook (online)
2 Ill. App. 297, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdermid-v-cotton-illappct-1878.