McFadden v. Lynn

49 Ill. App. 166, 1892 Ill. App. LEXIS 161
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 5, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 49 Ill. App. 166 (McFadden v. Lynn) 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
McFadden v. Lynn, 49 Ill. App. 166, 1892 Ill. App. LEXIS 161 (Ill. Ct. App. 1893).

Opinion

Opinion of tiie Court,

Wall, J.

Appellee recovered judgment against appellants for $570.63, for the value of certain grain sold by the former to the latter through Hubbard, their agent. It appears from the evidence that appellants were in the business of buying and selling grain at Havana. They had an elevator with cribs and other appliances for handling and storing grain at Oakforcl, and employed said Hubbard to act as their agent at the latter place, giving him general charge of their business at that point. He acted in that capacity for several years, and besides carried on a business of his own in the sale of hardware, agricultural implements, etc.

According to the arrangement between appellants and Hubbard, the regular course of business required the latter to pay for grain purchased by giving checks in favor of the vendors, upon appellants, specifying the number of bushels and the price paid. These checks were collected through the local banks.

The appellee had a quantity of wheat in the elevator, lie had placed it there on storage at different times, and on the 1st day of September, 1892, he sold it to Hubbard for the appellants. The total amount to be paid therefor was $591.53. Appellee then owed Hubbard $20.90 for merchandise.

For the difference of $570.63, Hubbard gave appellee his check on the First National Bank of Petersburg.

At the same time he drew a check in favor of appellee for the whole amount, $591.53, on appellants, and requested appellee to indorse it, which appellee did, signing his name in blank, and handed the check back to Hubbard.

"Which one of these checks was drawn first, and just what was said by Hubbard to appellee as his reason for wishing to transact the business in that way, are matters of somedispnte.

It is apparent, however, that it was all one transaction, and that whatever Hubbard did say, and whatever reason was assigned, appellee was induced to consent, though somewhat reluctantly, supposing Hubbard’s check ivould be duly honored by the bank on which it was drawn; but it was not paid, for want of funds. Hence this suit.

It seems that several times before, just such transactions occurred between the parties, as the appellee was in the habit of selling his grain to Hubbard, and was very often at such times in his debt for merchandise previously furnished, and all checks so drawn, before this one, were duly paid.

It is not doubtful tliat appellee knew it was the general custom of Hubbard, when he bought grain, to draw a check in favor of the seller for the amount of the purchase upon appellants, but it is not shown that he knew of any special arrangement between appellants and Hubbard, by which, the latter was restricted to that mode of making payment. A general agent is a person whom a man puts in his place to transact all of his business of a particular kind, or at a particular place. 2 Kent Comm. 9th Ed. 620. The acts of such an agent will bind his principal so long as he keeps within the general scope of his apparent authority, though he may act contrary to his private instructions, and this rule is necessary to prevent fraud and encourage confidence in dealing.

But an agent, constituted for a particular purpose and under a limited power, can not bind his principal if he exceeds that power.

The principal is bound by the acts of his agent if he clothe him with powers calculated to induce innocent third persons to believe he had due authority to act in the given case.

In the present instance Hubbard was the general agent of appellants to represent them in their grain operations at Oakford, with special instructions as to the mode of paying for grain. Appellee knew that payments Avere usually made in the way thus required.

The elevator, cribs, scales and other appliances for the purpose, were all in Hubbard’s hands, and he was held out to the Avorld as authorized to buy grain for appellants. This was, indeed, his authority. He Avas clothed Avith full poAver, apparently, for the purpose, and it does not appear that they ever interfered with his transactions, which ran up into very ‘ considerable amounts in the aggregate.

As already stated, Hubbard had no right to check on appellants for anything except grain actually purchased, but by the arrangement which he effected Avith appellee he was enabled to use the check given appellee to increase his credit at the bank for the purpose of meeting a draft upon him then there for collection, and when his check in favor of appellee was presented there was nothing left with which to pay it.

It is a maxim of natural justice, applicable with great force in cases of agency, that he who, without intentional fraud,.has enabled any person to do an act which must be injurious to himself or to another innocent party, shall himself suffer the injury rather than the other, whose confidence has been misplaced.

So that a principal holding out an agent as having authority to represent him and thereby asserting or impliedly admitting that the agent is worthy of trust and confidence must be bound by all his acts within the apparent scope of the employment. Hence the principal may even be held for the fraudulent acts of the agent when done in the course of the employment.

It is necessary, however, that the third party should act in good faith, use reasonable care, and that he should rely upon the principal.

That Hubbard committed a fraud, for which one of the parties to this suit must suffer is very certain. That appellants placed him in a position where he had the general opportunity, is also certain. That appellee gave him the special means by which he was enabled to commit the fraud is also certain. Appellee had a right to consider him trustworthy because appellants evidently so regarded him. But how far would this fact justify him in following an irregular and unsafe course of business to the detriment and injury of appellants ?

As a general rule the law does not protect one whose want of ordinary care has resulted in placing his adversary in an unfavorable position. "When, under such circumstances, he seeks to cast the burden which must be borne by one of them, upon the shoulders of the other, he is told that, had he exercised such care as might be expected of a reasonably prudent man, the loss would not have occurred. The term innocent,” as here used, describes one who not only acts in good faith, but with reasonable care. If he neglects to use such care he may mislead and prejudice the other, who has the right to presume that such care has been used.

One dealing with an agent, known to be such, may give him the exclusive credit, and in such case the creditor can not afterward elect to hold the principal. Story on Agency, Sec. 447; 2 Kent. Comm., 9th Ed., 630.

“ It is a general principle that if a creditor voluntarily give an enlarged credit to the agent of the debtor, or adopt a particular mode of payment, whereby the principal is placed in a worse situation than he would otherwise have been, the liability of the original debtor is discharged.

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Bluebook (online)
49 Ill. App. 166, 1892 Ill. App. LEXIS 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcfadden-v-lynn-illappct-1893.