Pope v. Meadow Spring Distilling Co.

20 F. 35, 1884 U.S. App. LEXIS 2141
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Wisconsin
DecidedApril 12, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 20 F. 35 (Pope v. Meadow Spring Distilling Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pope v. Meadow Spring Distilling Co., 20 F. 35, 1884 U.S. App. LEXIS 2141 (circtedwi 1884).

Opinion

Dyes, J.,

(charging jury.) These are two actions, one brought by Charles Pope and the other by D. W. Ryan, against the Meadow Spring Distilling Company, to recover in the one case the purchase price of a certain quantity of malt, and in the other case the purchase price of a quantity of barrels, which it is alleged came to the possession of the defendant company through a sale of the same, in the first instance, to one Leopold Wirth, and of which property, it is alleged, the defendant had the use and benefit. The complaint in the case of Pope charges that in August, 1883, Leopold Wirth, who was the president of the defendant company, ordered of the plaintiff, who was a malt-ster in Chicago, two car-loads of malt suitable for use in a distillery, and the plaintiff Pope, at the request of Wirth, shipped to him such two car-loads of malt on the twenty-eighth and twenty-ninth days of August, 1883; that the same were of the value of $1,255.78; that Wirth made the order and request for the malt for the use and benefit, and with the knowledge and on behalf, of the defendant, and for the purpose of getting the same info the possession of the defendant; that the defendant company realized the whole benefit and advantage of the purchase, and received the malt in pursuance of the shipment by the plaintiff, and used the same, and became thereby indebted to the plaintiff in the amount of the purchase price, $1,255.78. In the case of Ryan, the same state of facts and grounds of alleged liability are stated, except that the property described consisted of three car-loads of barrels, the value and purchase price of which are alleged to have been $775.25, which is the amount sought to be recovered by the plaintiff Ryan.

It is undisputed that the plaintiffs in the several actions, at the time they sold the property in question, made the sales on the indi[36]*36vidual credit of Wirth, and shipped the property to him as the purchaser and personal consignee thereof, and respectively received and accepted his individual acceptances for the purchase price, which acceptances were ultimately not paid. It seems that at the time of these transactions the Meadow Spring Distilling Company was a corporation owning and operating a newly-constructed distillery in this city, of which corporation Leopold Wirth was the president, and of which, in the conduct of its business, William Bergenthal was the general manager. It is claimed by the plaintiffs, in their respective cases, that immediately after the arrival of the malt and barrels in Milwaukee, the same were removed to the distillery of the defendant company, and that the defendant had the full use and benefit of the property in its business. The theory of the plaintiffs is that although Wirth negotiated for and ordered the malt and barrels in question in his own name and on his individual credit, he in fact made the purchase for the use and benefit of the defendant company; that the property was purchased to be used at the distillery of the defendant, and on behalf and with the knowledge of the company, and that the defendant in fact had the use and received the whole benefit of the property, and therefore ought to pay, and in law became liable to pay, for the same. The claim of the defendant in both cases is that the purchases were made by Leopold Wirth on his own account, for his own use, and on his sole credit; that the purchases were not made by him as an agent; that he had no authority so to act for the defendant; that the defendant company at the time had no knowledge of the transactions; that the purchases were not originally made for its use and benefit; that it had no connection therewith, and did not authorize the same, and that subsequently, after Wirth had become the owner of the property in his own right, it purchased the malt and barrels from him as a subsequent and independent transaction, and paid him'therefor; that, therefore, it is under no liability to the plaintiffs.

In submitting the cases to you, gentlemen, the court will not enter upon any discussion of the testimony. The facts lie within narrow compass, and they have been fully elucidated by counsel. You have heard the versions, given on both sides, of the negotiations which took place between Wirth and the plaintiffs in Chicago, the evidence of which the court has no doubt is admissible as tending to show the relations of Wirth to the transactions in dispute, and as bearing upon the character in which he acted in making the purchases. All the facts material to the controversy have been laid before you, and you are to say, in the light of those facts and the instructions which the court gives to you upon the law of the case, what the rights of the parties are. It is the law that where goods are sold to a person who is in fact an agent of another, and on the credit of such person, but without knowledge of the agency on the part of the seller,.the latter has the right to make the principal his debtor on discovering him; [37]*37and tlie fact that he may have taken the note or acceptance of such buyer for the goods before discovering the principal, will not affect his right to pursue the real principal. So, too, if the party making the purchase in fact purchases tlie property, not for himself, but for the use and benefit of a third party, and if such third party, knowing of such purchase, takes the property and appropriates it to his own use and benefit, lie is liable Cor the value thereof to the seller, although the seller may not have known, when he made the sale, that such third parly was the real party in interest, and may have understood at the time that he was making the sale to the party with whom he directly dealt, and may have made the sale on the credit of such party. It is also a principle of law that where the purchaser of goods upon credit is known to the seller to be an agent of a known principal, and the seller with such knowledge gives exclusive credit to the agent by taking his note or acceptance for the goods, the agent alone is responsible to the seller.

Applying these principles to this case, if you should find that Wirth, when he purchased the malt and barrels in question, was in fact the agent of the defendant company in making the purchase; that he purchased tlie property for the defendant, and for its use and benefit; and that the plaintiffs were at the time ignorant of such agency, — then, on discovery that the defendant was the real principal in the transactions, the plaintiffs had the right to assert their claims against the defendant, and, upon such state of facts being established, they are entitled to recover from the defendant the value of the property so sold, although they took the personal acceptances of Wirth for the property. Or if you should find that, although Wirtli had not original authority to make the purchases, he did in fact purchase the malt and barrels for the use and benefit of the defendant, and on its behalf, and that the defendant company, by its president and general manager, knew of such purchase, and with this knowledge received the property, and had the use and benefit of it, then the plaintiffs arc entitled to recover, although they may not have known, when they made the sales, that the defendant toas the real party in interest, and may have understood at the time that they wore selling to Wirth, and, in ignorance of the real party in interest, may have taken his acceptances for the property.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 F. 35, 1884 U.S. App. LEXIS 2141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pope-v-meadow-spring-distilling-co-circtedwi-1884.