Old Ben Coal Co. v. Universal Coal Co.

227 N.W. 794, 248 Mich. 486, 1929 Mich. LEXIS 594
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 3, 1929
DocketDocket No. 15, Calendar No. 34,299.
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 227 N.W. 794 (Old Ben Coal Co. v. Universal Coal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Old Ben Coal Co. v. Universal Coal Co., 227 N.W. 794, 248 Mich. 486, 1929 Mich. LEXIS 594 (Mich. 1929).

Opinion

Clark, J.

Plaintiff, a Delaware corporation, commenced suit by summons against Universal Coal Company, Universal Coal Sales Company, and the Price Hill Colliery Company, all West Virginia corporations, and it caused many writs of garnishment to be issued and served. A number of disclosures were filed showing indebtedness to the Price Hill Colliery Company. The garnishment is under 3 Comp. Laws 1915, § 13150, providing for garnishment of nonresident and foreign corporations. Procedural requirements of the statute of garnishment were satisfied.

The declaration contained five counts. The two defendants last named moved to dismiss the declaration chiefly as not stating a cause of action, and *489 they also moved to quash the garnishment. Plaintiff asked leave to amend the declaration, which was granted. The amendment added a sixth count. The declaration as amended was dismissed, and the garnishment quashed. Plaintiff brings error.

The facts as stated in the declaration, which must be here taken as true, are, briefly: Plaintiff and defendant Universal Coal Company entered into a contract in writing by which plaintiff agreed to buy and to pay for 100 cars of coal at $1.40 per ton, and defendant promised and agreed to deliver them. After four cars had been delivered said defendant breached the contract, failing and refusing to perform further, to plaintiff’s damage. On this cause of action plaintiff commenced suit against defendant Universal Coal Company in Ohio, and, in the court of common pleas of Hamilton county, Ohio, had judgment in its favor and against said defendant in the sum of $10,920' with interest from April 2, 1928, and with costs.

After the entry of judgment plaintiff learned that Universal Coal Company, in this transaction and in its business and affairs, was merely the agent, adjunct, and instrumentality of defendant the Price Hill Colliery Company, and wholly under its domination and control, a mere device of trade that the latter compaliy might evade liability.

In each of the first five counts of the declaration the >Ohio judgment is set forth and pleaded, averred to be a valid final judgment upon which there is due plaintiff the whole amount thereof, and it is averred that the defendants are “all corporations duly organized and existing under the laws of the State of West Virginia.” The judgment is declared on with addition of the facts, above stated, of domination and control of the judgment debtor by the *490 Price Hill Colliery Company, and judgment is prayed against the Price Hill Colliery Company. The original cause of action is not pleaded. It is treated as merged in the judgment. The theory of these counts, in so far as they are briefed by counsel, is that the Universal Coal Company, with whom plaintiff dealt, was, in legal effect, a mere agent, tool, or instrumentality of the undisclosed principal, the Price Hill Colliery Company, and that as plaintiff had no knowledge of the undisclosed principal and the fact of the relation at the time it took judgment against the agent, it may still recover against the principal. The theory is good, but recovery against the principal must be on the original cause of action.

As to af third person with whom an agent has contracted, in a case such as this, for an undisclosed principal, the principal arid agent are not jointly liable, nor are they, in a strict sense, severally liable. The liability is an alternative one.

It is said in 2 Mechem on Agency (2d Ed.), p. 1331:

“A contract has been made which in terms binds the agent only. Nevertheless the principal may be made liable upon it. How is he liable? Although the other party may perhaps sue both severally but simultaneously, or possibly sue both jointly, the obligation can hardly be deemed a joint one in the sense that it can ultimately be enforced .against both. Neither can it be said that both are liable severally in the sense that recovery can be had partly from each. The liability is commonly said to be an alternative one. The agent can be held because he made the contract in his own name, or the principal can be held because it is in law deemed to be his contract. Which one shall be held? The answer ordinarily given is that the other party may ‘elect’ between them.”

*491 In Schweyer v. Jones, 152 Mich. 241, it was held, quoting syllabus:

“Where a simple contract is made by a duly authorized agent without disclosing his principal, and the other contracting party afterwards discovers that the person with whom he dealt was not the principal, he may abandon his right to look to the agent personally, and resort to the principal.”

See Timmerman v. Bultman, 243 Mich. 344; 1 Freeman on Judgments (5th Ed.), p. 1033.

As plaintiff’s right to recovery asserted here is alternative, depending upon the doctrine of election, plaintiff cannot stand on- the judgment against the agent as valid and binding and treat such judgment as a cause of action against the principal. Suing upon the judgment it cannot bring in a new and different party and take judgment against it. 34 C. J. p. 1091; 2 Freeman on Judgments (5th Ed.), p. 2252. With respect to these counts the court was right in ordering dismissal.

The sixth count of the declaration is against the Price Hill Colliery Company as, in legal effect, the undisclosed principal of its agent Universal Coal Company -with whom plaintiff dealt. It avers the original cause of action. It sets forth the contract and its breach and claims damages therefor. It recites that plaintiff learned of the undisclosed principal after the judgment had been taken against its agent, and that the judgment remains wholly unsatisfied. It avers sufficiently the relation between the- defendants just above named. The count is sufficient in its averment of facts. It is also challenged as insufficient in law.

That plaintiff took judgment against the agent before it had knowledge of the undisclosed principal *492 and of the relation, is not an election, the judgment being wholly unsatisfied.

We quote from 21 R. C. L. p. 894:

“The generally accepted rule seems to be that when the agency has been disclosed before suit is filed a judgment obtained therein against the agent, although unsatisfied, is a bar to an action against the principal. Wlien, however, the fact that atn agency existed comes to the knowledge of the plaintiff only after he has obtained the judgment against the agent, if there has been no satisfaction therein, he may then proceed against the principal.”

See 2 C. J. p. 846; 6 L. R. A. (N. S.) 729, note; 21 L. R. A. (N. S.) 791, note; Greenburg v. Palmieri, 71 N. J. Law, 83 (58 Atl. 297); Brown v. Reiman, 62 N. Y. Supp. 663.

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Bluebook (online)
227 N.W. 794, 248 Mich. 486, 1929 Mich. LEXIS 594, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/old-ben-coal-co-v-universal-coal-co-mich-1929.