Pac. Vinegar & Pickle Works v. Smith

93 P. 85, 152 Cal. 507, 1907 Cal. LEXIS 377
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 6, 1907
DocketS.F. No. 4319.
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 93 P. 85 (Pac. Vinegar & Pickle Works v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pac. Vinegar & Pickle Works v. Smith, 93 P. 85, 152 Cal. 507, 1907 Cal. LEXIS 377 (Cal. 1907).

Opinion

*509 HENSHAW, J.

Sidney M. Smith in his lifetime was the president of the plaintiff corporation. This action was brought against his estate to recover as damages the balance remaining due on certain promissory notes executed by the California Packing Company to plaintiff corporation, which were accepted and received by Sidney M. Smith as president of the corporation without authority so to do and against the express instructions of plaintiff’s' board of directors. Trial was had before a jury, whose verdict passed for plaintiff. Prom the judgment which followed and from the order denying the motion for a new trial defendant appeals.

Upon the appeal she first contends that the acts of Smith were ratified by plaintiff corporation. This ratification, it is argued, was established by the acts of plaintiff.

The notes made by the California Packing Company were indorsed by A. B. Patrick and presented nominally to plaintiff corporation, but in fact to its president Smith, by whom there was placed upon the notes the indorsement of the plaintiff corporation, after which some of these notes were discounted in the banks, some by the president himself, while others remained the property of the plaintiff corporation. Subsequently the California Packing Company and its accommodation indorser A. B. Patrick, both became insolvent. In the bankruptcy proceedings which followed, the plaintiff corporation participated by presenting these notes and received from the bankrupts’ estates part payment of the amount due thereon. It is urged that these acts amounted to a ratification and relieved Mr. Smith and his estate from all liability to the Pacific Vinegar and Pickle Works. For the correct determination of this proposition, other facts than these thus stated are necessary for consideration. Some of those facts will be found set forth in Pacific Vinegar and Pickle Works v. Smith, 145 Cal. 352, [104 Am. St. Rep. 42, 78 Pac. 550]. Others are as follows: The California Packing Company under an agreement to purchase certain of its supplies from plaintiff corporation, promised to make its settlements on the first collection day of each month for all goods purchased for the calendar month preceding. Afterward Mr. Smith, as president of the corporation, requested of his board of directors that he be allowed to extend credit to the Packing Company, stating that the latter company could secure the *510 indorsement of A. B. Patrick to its notes, it being understood that A. B. Patrick was financially responsible. The directors authorized Mr. Smith to extend credit to the company not exceeding fifteen thousand dollars. Under this agreement the sales continued to the Packing Company, and in turn its promissory notes bearing seven per cent interest per annum were taken. These notes were discounted by the plaintiff corporation from time to time as money was required. The notes were three months’ notes. At first they were paid promptly at maturity, but within a short time the Packing Company became financially embarrassed. Mr.- Cote, its manager, explained the situation to plaintiff’s president, and an arrangement was entered into between them whereby when a note of the Packing Company became due Mr. Smith gave to Mr. Cote the check of the plaintiff corporation to pay the note, and in return took the defendant Packing Company’s note—in effect a renewal note for the same amount. Not only did Mr. Smith thus use the money of the plaintiff corporation, but he charged the Packing Company a brokerage commission of one per cent for so doing, and in some instances took a bonus in addition thereto. These transactions were concealed from the directors of the plaintiff corporation, to whom at their meetings Mr. Smith represented that the obligations of the Packing Company were being promptly met and that the outstanding notes to the plaintiff, which notes it either held or had discounted, amounted to about the sum for which he was authorized to extend credit. When, however, the failure of the Packing Company came, plaintiff was first apprised that there were of the Packing Company notes held by it or indorsed in its name by its president, Smith, and discounted, either to Smith himself or to the Bank of British Columbia, an aggregate of sixty thousand dollars, about twenty-three thousand dollars of which was held by the bank and about twenty-one thousand dollars by Smith himself. The cases of Pacific Vinegar and Pickle Works v. Smith, and Smith v. Pacific Vinegar and Pickle Works, 145 Cal. 352, [104 Am. St. Rep. 42, 78 Pac. 550], were cross-actions wherein Smith sought to recover upon the Packing Company’s notes which had been indorsed by him in the name of the plaintiff corporation and without its knowledge and which were by him held. The determination of that litigation was against Smith’s conten *511 tion, and the facts there brought forth were held not to constitute a ratification. Nor in this case can it be successfully contended that the acts of the plaintiff amounted to a ratification which would exculpate its agent. The general rule undoubtedly is that the ratification of an unauthorized act of an agent is an acceptance by the principal of the responsibilities of the act and the substitution of himself for the agent. In general, the rule is applied for the protection of innocent third persons, those who have dealt with the agent upon the strength of his apparent or ostensible authority. As to such persons such a rule is essential for the preservation of their rights, and it is therefore enforced to the fullest extent. It is declared to be the duty of the principal to act immediately after knowledge, and his passivity or silence will be construed into an acquiescence or ratification so as to protect the innocent third party. In general, also, the same rule is applied, to relieve the agent where the principal could have disaffirmed or rescinded as against the innocent third party and has failed to do so, and this upon the very logical theory that having accepted the contract as to the third party with knowledge of its terms, and with ability to rescind he has thus affirmed the act of his agent. But upon a moment’s reflection it will become apparent that the reason for applying the rule in all its liberality to innocent third persons does not exist in the same broad and benignant sense to the unwarranted and perhaps unlawful act of the agent. Thus, in many instances, the transaction is one which the principal could not rescind, because of the ostensible power of his agent. The innocent third party is thus fully protected. But can it with reason or justice be said that because the principal is thus compelled to accept the consideration from the innocent third party, the agent himself must of necessity be held harmless for his violation of duty and breach of trust ? If an agent with ostensible authority to sell his principal’s wheat, but under instructions to sell it for not less than a dollar a bushel, shall sell and deliver it for fifty cents a bushel, there is no power in the principal to rescind the sale. Shall the principal by accepting the fifty cents be held to have exonerated his agent from liability for the other fifty cents per bushel? Such a doctrine certainly does not commend itself and is not sustained. It is limited, so far as the agent is *512

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
93 P. 85, 152 Cal. 507, 1907 Cal. LEXIS 377, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pac-vinegar-pickle-works-v-smith-cal-1907.