Pike v. Douglass & Co.

28 Ark. 59
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 15, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 28 Ark. 59 (Pike v. Douglass & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pike v. Douglass & Co., 28 Ark. 59 (Ark. 1872).

Opinion

English, Sp. J.

Hugh Douglass & Co. sued Pike & Walter, in the Monroe circuit court, on an account for goods, wares and merchandise. The defendants answered severally, denying the indebtedness alleged against them. There was a verdict for the plaintiffs, motion for a new trial overruled, bill of exceptions, and appeal by the defendants.

The grounds of the motion for a new trial were:

1. That the verdict of the jury was not sustained by sufficient evidence.

2. That the verdict was contrary to law.

8. That the court erred in giving the instructions marked two and three asked by the plaintiffs.

4. The court erred in refusing to give the instructions marked two, three and five asked by the defendants.

On the trial the appellees introduced evidence conducing to prove that they were wholesale merchants of Nashville, Tennessee. That about the 80th of September,. 1870, Swape, a merchant of Clarendon, Arkansas, known to appellees to be a reliable man, came to their house in Nashville and represented to them that he was authorized to purchase a bill of goods for Pike & Walker, of Clarendon, and that they were responsible and punctual men. On these representations, appellees sold the goods sued on, amounting to $797,45, on sixty days time, charged them to Pike & Walker, shipped them to them, forwarded bill of lading and invoice made out in their names; and that they received the goods, and disposed of them in a store kept by them at Clarendon.

The testimony of Swape conduces to prove that he was authorized by Pike & Walker to purchase the goods for them.

Pike attempted to prove that he had agreed to take Walker as a partner on condition that he would furnish an amount of goods equal in value to the stock that he, Pike, had on hand, and that the goods were purchased on Walker’s account and not on his; and that, on ascertaining that Swape had purchased the goods in the name of Pike & Walker, he repudiated the purchase and advised appellees of his want of authority.

Walker attempted to shift the liability on to Youngblood, who was. indebted to him, and was to pay him in money or goods.

Taking all the evidence together, it was conflicting; and whilst the liability of Walker was, we think, clearly enough made out, the liability of Pike was not so clearly established. But the jury found a verdict against both of them, and the court below refused to grant a new trial, and if it may be thought that the preponderance of evidence is not in favor of the verdict, there is certainly no want of evidence to sustain it.

The appellees moved the court to give the jury nine instructions— some of which were given and some refused. The appellants moved for six instructions, some cf which were given and others refused. And the court of its own motion, gave four instructions, which -were not objected to on either side.

The second instruction, given at the instance of the appellees, and of which the appellants complain, is as follows: “2. If the jury believe from the evidence that the goods in question were purchased, in the names of the defendants, by a person unauthorized, but, after the purchase, were received by them, and used and disposed of as their own, after a knowledge that they had been purchased in their names, this much will render them responsible for their price and value, and the jury will find for the plaintiffs.”

There were two leading questions before the jury upon all the evidence : Eirst, whether Pike & Walker authorized Swape to purchase the goods for them; and second, whether if they did not authorize him to purchase the goods for them, as their agent, they impliedly ratified the purchase by receiving the goods, and using or disposing of them for their own purposes, after being informed that the goods were purchased of the appellees in their names, and upon their credit.

The instruction copied above relates to this second question, and expresses the law substantially correct. If one purchase goods for another without authority, and the person for whom they are purchased receives them and uses or sells them on his own account, after being informed that they were purchased for him, this is an implied ratification of the act of the person making the purchase in his name. Story on Agency, 253. And if, on receiving the goods, and being informed that they were purchased in his name, he merely informs the seller that the purchase was unauthorized, this is not enough, but he should restore the goods to the seller, or pay for them if he converts them to his own purposes. This is but honest and fair conduct.

The third instruction given at the instance of the appellees, of which the appellants complain, is as follows: “ 3. If the jury believe from the evidence that the defendants were undertaking business together at the time the goods in question were purchased in their names by an agent, or when they came to their hands and were used by them, this fact will constitute them copartners as to outside parties, even though they may not in point of fact have been partners as between themselves.” This instruction, taken by itself, is objectionable. A partnership may extend to all the business of the parties, or to a single branch thereof, or to a single adventure, or even to a single thing. Story on Part., 81.

If the appellants being about to enter into partnership, authorize Swape to purchase goods for them, and he accordingly purchased them of the appellees, they would be liable to them as partners for the value of the goods, whether, as between themselves, they had perfected their partnership agreement or not. And so, if Swape purchased the goods for them and in their names as partners, and they received them, and disposed of them for their own purposes, after being informed that they were so purchased, they were liable to the appellees for the value of the goods, as partners. But the use of the goods, without a knowledge that they had been purchased in their names and upon their credit, would not be a ratification of an unauthorized purchase.

If this bad been the only instruction given to the jury, it might have misled them, but taken in connection with others in which the same principle was more fully and accurately expressed, and the case coming up on the refusal of the court below to grant a new trial, on the whole record, the judgment should not be reversed for inaccurate or defective expressions in a single instruction. Sweeptzer v. Gaines et al., 19 Ark., 96.

The second instruction moved by the appellants, and refused by the court, is as follows: “ 2. If the jury believe from the evidence that the defendants, or either of them, had contracted with Swape & Youngblood, or either of them, to furnish them goods in payment of an antecedent debt, due by Youngblood to the defendants, or either of them, and that the defendants received the goods for the purchase price, of which this action is brought, through the said Swape & Youngblood, without full knowledge of the fact that they had been purchased on their credit, and that plaintiffs looked to them for payment, the subsequent use of the goods by the defendants did not amount to a ratification of the purchase of the goods on their account.”

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Webb v. Allington
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Bluebook (online)
28 Ark. 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pike-v-douglass-co-ark-1872.