Montgomery Ward & Co. v. Arbogast

81 P.2d 885, 53 Wyo. 275, 1938 Wyo. LEXIS 19
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 2, 1938
Docket2056
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 81 P.2d 885 (Montgomery Ward & Co. v. Arbogast) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Montgomery Ward & Co. v. Arbogast, 81 P.2d 885, 53 Wyo. 275, 1938 Wyo. LEXIS 19 (Wyo. 1938).

Opinion

*279 Riner, Justice.

This is a proceeding in error to review a judgment entered upon the verdict of a jury in a cause wherein C. P. Arbogast and Laura B. Arbogast were plaintiffs and Montgomery Ward and Co., a corporation, and F. W. Redman were defendants in the district court of Natrona County. The verdict aforesaid was rendered against the defendant corporation only and it alone has prosecuted this proceeding for review. Hereinafter the plaintiff in error will usually be referred to as the “Company” and the defendants in error as the “plaintiffs” or by their respective names.

The action below was one brought by the plaintiffs for alleged negligence on the part of the above named defendants in installing a hot air coal furnace in the basement of a building located about eleven miles from the City of Casper, Wyoming, and owned by the plaintiffs, wherein they conducted an inn and a retail liquor business. The plaintiffs also occupied this building as their home. It is asserted that this alleged negligence caused a fire on the evening of December 25, 1935, which destroyed the building and much of its contents. The furnace was purchased from the Company the latter part of October, 1935, under a time payment contract and an alleged agreement on the part of said Company to install same in the basement of said building used by plaintiffs as above described. The sale of the furnace to the plaintiffs was made on the Company’s behalf by the defendant F. W. Redman, who is a salesman in its employ and in charge of the plumbing and heating department in the Company’s local store engaged in business at Casper, Wyoming.

It is alleged in plaintiffs’ petition and denied by the *280 defendants’ answer that Redman had “full power and authority” to “install hot air furnaces whenever the same were sold and delivered to any purchaser” by said Company. The actual work of installing the furnace was done by one G. L. Welch with the assistance of his son, Clair D. Welch. Accordingly, whether they were the agents of the Company in performing this task appears to be the principal question argued by the parties here, the Company insisting that there is insufficient evidence in the record to establish that Redman had authority to employ Welch and his son to install the furnace in question or that they were in fact engaged by the Company to do so. The position of the plaintiffs appear to be that there is “circumstantial evidence” which when considered “in connection with other evidence” was sufficient to carry the question of agency or non-agency to bind the Company in the installation of the furnace as one of fact to the jury for its decision. It becomes necessary, therefore, to examine somewhat in detail the evidence submitted on the trial of the case in so far as it deals with these questions.

The record discloses that Laura B. Arbogast, one of the plaintiffs and the wife of C. P. Arbogast, at his request, some time in October, 1935, made an inquiry at the Company’s store in Casper, relative to the purchase of a furnace for heating an addition to the building owned by them as aforesaid, which was then in the course of construction. In response to this inquiry, some days later, Redman came to plaintiffs’ inn, and after showing him the rooms to be heated, Arbo-gast took him to the basement where the furnace was to be installed. The latter measured the rooms where the runs or pipes from the furnace were to be placed and also made a penciled sketch thereof. The two men then came upstairs to the bar room, where Mrs. Arbo- *281 gast was, and according to her husband’s testimony the following conversation took place:

“I said, ‘Mr. Redman, figure out the cost of your largest furnace complete.’ Mr. Redman figured a little there on the bar, and he turned to me and says, ‘Well, Mr. Arbogast, our twenty six inch furnace will cost you §145.00 complete.’ He says, ‘Now, the installation, do you-want that added on your contract or not?’ And I says, ‘Of course I want you to install this furnace.’ ‘Oh’, he says, ‘Sure, we install it, but how do you want to pay, put that on your contract or do you want to pay them when it is done?’ ”

Arbogast thereupon asked Mr. Redman how much the installation would be and the latter stated it would be §20.00. Arbogast then turned to his wife and, as his testimony reads verbatim, “I says, ‘I think we can pay the §20.00 when they do the job, don’t you, Laura?’ And she says, ‘Well, I guess we can.’ ”

Mrs. Arbogast’s testimony concerning this conversation was: When her husband asked Redman what the furnace would cost the latter said, “ ‘This will cost $145.00. Now what do you want to do about the installation, do you want us to put that on the contract, or are you going to pay for it when it is done?’ My husband said, T want you to install it.’ He said, ‘Oh yes, of course I know you want us to install it, but how do you want to pay for it, do you want it to go in the contract?’ My husband said, ‘Well, I don’t know, how much would it be?’ And he said, ‘Well, it would be $20.00.’ So Mr. Arbogast turned to me, he said, ‘I believe we could pay that now, couldn’t ■ we ?’ And I said, ‘Why, I imagine we could.’ ” It appears by the record that the Arbogasts had carried a time payment account with the Company’s Casper store for several years previously.

Redman, as a witness for the defendants, relating his recollection of this conversation stated that he told *282 the Arbogasts that he would have to refigure the price after he got back to the store, but it would be very-close to the figure given them; that “I believe I quoted him about $150.00 on the furnace, and the plumbing I don’t exactly, I believe about $200.00. I asked him if he wanted to pay cash for it or add it to his time payment account, and he said he wanted to add it to his account; 'He wanted to know if we would install it, and I told him that we had no authority, but I knew wé would be glad to do. everything we could to get him a good competent man to do the work for him. I told him that in some stores we had to have authority to have the labor charges put on the contract, and I asked him if he wanted to have the labor charges on the contract. And he inquired how much it would cost him, and I told him in my experience it should run from $20.00 to $30.00 for a furnace of that size. I hadn’t been out here very long, but where I came from that was about' what the contractors had charged for installing furnaces; in other words it would run about $4.00 to $8.00 per run for.installing the furnace”; that he did not at that conversation or at all agree to install the furnace, but that as an accommodation he would try to get some one who would install it.

Under date of October 23, 1935, a written time payment sales contract was signed in the Company’s Cas-per store for the furnace aforesaid and also certain plumbing fixtures, the purchase of which had been discussed by Redman and Mr. and Mrs. Arbogast at the time the conversation detailed above occurred. The total bill for all of the merchandise thus purchased amounted to $419.29, of which $145;00 was fixed as the'price of the furnace and its 'fittings. This contract was executed by Mrs. Arbogast, who signed her husband’s name as the buyer of this merchandise, and was accepted through the signature of D. L.

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Bluebook (online)
81 P.2d 885, 53 Wyo. 275, 1938 Wyo. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/montgomery-ward-co-v-arbogast-wyo-1938.