Miller v. Watt & Walker
This text of 70 Ga. 385 (Miller v. Watt & Walker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
This suit was brought originally against husband and wife. The husband’s name was stricken, and the suit proceeded against Mrs. Miller alone. It was founded on an open account for goods sold, and a verdict was returned for the plaintiffs for the amount of the account. Whereupon Mrs. Miller moved for a new trial; and error is assigned here on the denial of that motion.
[387]*387
On page 239 (10th division) Judge Nisbet, in delivering the opinion of the court, says : “ If an agent buy in his own name, without disclosing his principal, and the seller subsequently discover that the purchase was in fact made for another, he may, at his choice, look for payment either to the agent or the principal, and that too, notwithstanding the title has been made to the agent, and he debited with the account. * * * On the other hand, if at the time of the sale, the seller knows, not only the person who is nominally dealing with him is not principal but agent, and also knows who the principal really is, and, notwithstanding all the knowledge, chooses to make the agent his debtor, dealing with him and him alone, the seller must be taken to have abandoned his recourse against the principal, and cannot afterwards, upon failure of the agent, turn round and charge the principal, having once made his election at the time when he had the power of choosing between the one and the other.” Citing 3 Douglass, [388]*388410, and note; 4 Taunt, 574; 15 East., 62; 9 B. & C., 78; 4 Wash. C. C. R., 567. And then the court there go on to say: “ An election deliberately made, with knowledge of facts aud absence of fraud, is conclusive; and the party who has once elected, can claim no right to make a second choice, and there is no difference in this respect between the rules pursued by courts of law aud equity. * * * We have seen that the hare circumstance of having charged the goods to him (the agent) on the books, does not constitute such an election.”
That case rules and controls this. In that, it was sought to charge a trust estate, and not only was the agent or trustee charged and debited with the goods, but his individual promissory note was taken in liquidation of the debt, yet the trust estate was held liable.
Judgment affirmed.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
70 Ga. 385, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-watt-walker-ga-1883.