Petersime Incubator Co. v. Ferguson

53 P.2d 505, 143 Kan. 151, 1936 Kan. LEXIS 293
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 25, 1936
DocketNo. 32,563
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 53 P.2d 505 (Petersime Incubator Co. v. Ferguson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Petersime Incubator Co. v. Ferguson, 53 P.2d 505, 143 Kan. 151, 1936 Kan. LEXIS 293 (kan 1936).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Smith, J.:

This was an action in replevin. Judgment was for defendant for damages on a cross petition. Plaintiff appeals.

Plaintiff manufactures and sells incubators. The home office of the company is at Gettysburg, Ohio. Defendants desired to engage in the business of conducting a chicken hatchery. A man by the name of Talbot was employed by plaintiff to sell its incubators. The extent of the authority given Talbot is the deciding factor in this case. All parties are agreed that Talbot sold three incubators to defendants for plaintiff. The purchase price of these was $3,150. Defendants paid $150 and gave eight notes for the balance. Four of these notes, for $375 each, were due on the first of March, April, May and June of 1933, and four of them were due on the first of the same months in 1934. The contract entered into by the plaintiff and defendants provided that all payments were to plaintiff and that all deferred payments were to be made at the office of plaintiff. The contract further provided that title and right of possession to the machines should not pass until the entire purchase price and interest had been paid, and that in case of default in any paypient when due then the entire amount should become due and plaintiff should have the right to repossess the incubators. The date of the contract was November 21, 1932. When the first note was due, March 1, 1933, defendants did not pay it. On September 25, 1933, plaintiff brought a suit on the notes in the district court of Wyandotte county and procured the appointment of a receiver to take charge of the business of defendants. This receiver operated the business from September 26 to October 19, 1933. On the latter date the receiver was discharged. On January 26, 1934, plaintiff brought this action in replevin.

The petition alleged that plaintiff was the owner of the three incubators; that plaintiff was entitled to the immediate possession of them; that their value was $3,000; and that plaintiff had been damaged $500 by their detention. The prayer was for the possession of the incubators and for $500 damages for their wrongful detention. Only one of the defendants answered the petition. His amended answer and cross petition alleged that after the first of the notes [153]*153became due and on or about the first of March, 1933, defendant entered into an oral agreement with plaintiff by its duly authorized agent whereby plaintiff agreed to extend the payment date on the notes for one year on the payment to plaintiff of $35 and that such an amount was paid plaintiff by defendant in accordance with the agreement. The answer further alleged that subsequently defendant entered into another oral agreement with the plaintiff whereby the plaintiff agreed that in consideration of the payment to it by defendant of $200 to be applied in reduction of the balance due on the notes that the payment date on the notes would be extended one year; and that the $200 was paid in accordance with the agreement; that on or about September 20, 1933, defendant made a further agreement with plaintiff whereby it was agreed that in consideration of the delivery to plaintiff by defendant of a smaller incubator than the ones involved in this action, the plaintiff would give defendant credit for an additional $225 and would grant defendant an extension of a year on the date of payment of the notes; and that even though defendant is ready to comply with the agreement the plaintiff has refused to grant the extension.

In the cross petition and counterclaim defendant alleged that about the 26th of September, 1933, plaintiff filed an action against the answering defendant and his brother; that at that time defendant owned and was operating the hatchery business and was earning therefrom about $200 a month; that at the same time the petition in the above case was filed the plaintiff secured the appointment of a receiver to take charge of the business of defendant without giving defendant an opportunity to be heard “and by false and fraudulent representations to the court.” The cross petition further alleged the receiver took charge of the business on September 26, 1933, was discharged as receiver on October 19, 1933, and was allowed a fee of $100 for his services and was directed to appropriate from the assets of the business the sum of $36.30 which was in the hands of the receiver when he was discharged; that the appointment of the receiver was wrongful and fraudulent, and that said false and fraudulent statements were made to the court orally in that plaintiff stated at the time it submitted said application for a receiver that this answering defendant was dissipating its assets, neglecting the business and threatening to remove, damage and injure the property described in plaintiff’s petition. The cross petition then alleged that as a result of the appointment of the receiver defendant was de[154]*154prived of the operation of his business; his credit was ruined; his standing and reputation with his customers was impaired; his business in the sale of feed was destroyed, causing him to lose the sum of $125 a month which he was able to earn; that he would be deprived of the feed business for a long time in the future; that he was compelled to spend $150 for attorney fees to defend the receivership suit; and that the expenses of maintaining the receivership were, paid out of the funds of defendant. The prayer was that plaintiff take nothing by its petition and for judgment for damages on the cross petition in the amount of $5,000. All of the oral contracts set out in the answer were alleged to have been made by one S. H. Talbot, the agent of plaintiff.

The reply of plaintiff denied the agency and authority of Talbot to make the contracts pleaded and denied specifically that the contracts were within the scope of the authority or employment of Talbot. The answer of plaintiff to the cross petition was a general denial. The pendency of the receivership suit was also pleaded as well as the fact that there was a motion pending at that time to modify the order discharging the receiver.

With the issues thus framed the case was submitted to a jury. A verdict for defendant in the amount of $1,250 was returned. Judgment was rendered accordingly. This appeal is from that judgment.

The first error argued by plaintiff is that there was no proof of the authority of Talbot to make the contracts pleaded. This was put in issue by the pleadings. The verdict of the jury in favor of defendant, later approved by the trial court, carries with it all findings necessary to uphold that verdict, if there was any substantial evidence to support it.

The theory of the defendant and the trial court was that Talbot was held out to the world as one. having the authority of a general agent and that defendant was entitled to rely on that when dealing with him. The rule is stated in 2 C. J. 581 as follows:

“A general agent, unless he acts under a special and limited authority, impliedly has power to bind his principal by whatever is usual and proper to effect such a purpose as is the subject of his employment, and in the absence of known limitations third persons dealing with such a general agent have a right to act on the presumption that the scope and character of the business he is employed to transact measures the extent of his authority, and to hold the principal responsible for the agent’s acts within such authority. This rule applies notwithstanding the agent disregards private instructions, provided the person seeking to hold the principal responsible for the agent’s act was ignorant of such instructions.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
53 P.2d 505, 143 Kan. 151, 1936 Kan. LEXIS 293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/petersime-incubator-co-v-ferguson-kan-1936.