Q. W. Loverin-Browne Co. v. Bank of Buffalo

75 N.W. 923, 7 N.D. 569, 1898 N.D. LEXIS 105
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMay 27, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 75 N.W. 923 (Q. W. Loverin-Browne Co. v. Bank of Buffalo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Q. W. Loverin-Browne Co. v. Bank of Buffalo, 75 N.W. 923, 7 N.D. 569, 1898 N.D. LEXIS 105 (N.D. 1898).

Opinion

Bartholomew, J.

Defendant bank appeals to this court from a directed verdict against it. The plaintiff corporation is a wholesale dealer in groceries at Chicago. On February 20, 1896, defendant received from plaintiff a telegram which read: “We guaranty payment of fifty dollars to C. E. Birdsall.” The next communication between the parties was a letter from plaintiff to the defendant dated April 6, 1896, which reads as follows: “At the request of Mr. Birsdall, who says he has arranged with you, [570]*570we hand you herewith a bill for collection: C. E. Birdsall, Enderlin, No. Dak., $969.79, net. Mr. Birdsall will settle with you for your charges for collection. The delivery is at Enderlin, Apr. 10th; and we suppose Mr. B. has explained that the goods are sold to different farmers around Enderlin, who will come in and get goods and pay at depot on above date. You can send a man over there, and have him collect from Birdsall, who will deliver goods to customers and collect for them.” Four days later plaintiff sent another letter to defendant, which reads: “We herewith inclose a bill for collection: C. E. Birdsall, Davenport, N. Dak., $844.18, net. This delivery is at Davenport, Apr. 15th. Mr. Birdsall will settle for collecting the same as on previous collection to Enderlin.” These collections were promptly made and remitted, and their receipt in full is acknowledged by plaintiff on April 21st. Other similar collections followed, including one for goods to be delivered at Ada, Minn. In remitting for that collection the defendant wrote plaintiff as follows: “Inclosed, we send you N. Y. draft for $194.43. We furnished your'Mr. Birdsall team, harness, buggy, and money to the amount of $330. He told us that his livery bill was so high that his expenses run up so that he was unable to make anything, and that you would be perfectly satisfied with the deal, and I think myself that it will be a good thing for him; for in harvest time, through this country, it is almost impossible to get a livery rig at any reasonable figure. Our collector received from the Ada collection $524.43; our bill against Mr. Birdsall, $330; draft to balance, $194.43. Trusting this will be satisfactory to you, as we understand from Mr. Birdsall it will, and also from telegrams we have received from you, we are, very truly, yours.” On same date defendant wrote to Mr. Birdsall ás follows: “I have today sent Loverin & Browne Co., a draft for $194.43. When Mr. Casey returned, and told me that you had got rid of the team I sold you, I thought it better to square up the account, as no doubt you would wish it yourself, and rather deal directly with the house than to have the matter stand open between the three of us. I [571]*571charged you $50 for the Lee mare; $200 for the rig that you took away; $24 for Casey; $20 cash; $36 in note, — making in all $330. I inclose you copy of letter sent to the house.” The plaintiff promptly responded, denying all agency on the part of Birdsall, and all liability for any property purchased by him or accounts made by him in the capacity of agent, and demanded a remittance of the balance collected. Defendant refused to account for such balance, except as by its letter of June 5th, and plaintiff brought this action in November following to recover the balance in defendant’s hands. In its answer, defendant alleges, on information and belief, that said Birdsall was the agent of plaintiff engaged in soliciting orders and selling goods for plaintiff, and was generally authorized by plaintiff to attend to its business in that line, and do all things for and in plaintiff’s name in furtherance of that agency, and then declares that in May, 1896, at the solicitation and request of Birdsall, defendant sold and delivered to him a team, harness and buggy, and advanced him certain moneys, for and on behalf of plaintiff, with which to prosecute and attend to plaintiff’s said business, in all of the value of $330; that said team was purchased by Birdsall on account of plaintiff, and as its agent, and procured said advances for plaintiff as its agent duly authorized, “and then and there agreed that plaintiff should and would pay defendant therefor; and the said Birdsall then and there further agreed to pay defendant said sum of $330 therefor out of the first moneys realized and received by him from the sale of plaintiff’s said goods." On the trial plaintiff’s general manager and plaintiff’s bookkeeper testified, in substance, that Birdsall never was the agent for plaintiff, or authorized to act for it in any way; that plaintiff sent him a price list at which it would furnish goods to him; that he sold the goods at such prices as he saw proper; that when he had taken orders for goods he would send them to plaintiff, and plaintiff would fill the orders, and send the goods to such point as he might direct, when he would deliver the same to his customers, being responsible to plaintiff only for the price-list price thereof. Defendant sought [572]*572to prove certain statements and acts of Mr. Birdsall as showing agency. This evidence was excluded on objection, and as it was .not shown that such statements or acts were ever brought home to, or in any manner adopted by, plaintiff, the ruling was clearly right, on plain principles. Likewise the fact, if it were a fact, that plaintiff paid a certain li.very bill incurred by Birdsall, was incompetent to establish agency. Defendant relies upon the telegram of February 20th, and the letters of plaintiff of April 6th and 10th, as sufficient to warrant it in regarding Birdsall as plaintiff’s agent. By what process of reasoning it could have been supposed that such documents recognized him as an agent authorized to purchase a team, buggy, and harness, we cannot understand. As a matter of fact, they did not recognize him as an agent for any purpose. By the telegram the plaintiff made itself guarantor for Birdsall. That presupposed a primary liability on Birdsall’s part, and notified the bank that it must deal with Birdsall as a principal, and with plaintiff as a guarantor, so far as the matter stated in the telegram was concerned. The statement in the letters specially relied upon is the declaration that Birdsall would settle with defendant for its collection charges. It is claimed that this was a notification to defendant that plaintiff had arranged with Birdsall to pay su’ch charges for it. On the contrary, it was a notification to defendant that it must look to Birdsall alone for the payment of such charges, and that plaintiff would not be liable therefor. The collections sent to defendant were stated at so many dollars, “net.” Plaintiff did not concern itself about the amount of collection fees. It demanded so much money, net. That this was fully understood and acted upon by the defendant is shown by the fact that the exact amount of the Enderlin and Davenport collections was collected and remitted.

Near the close of the trial the defendant made an offer of testimony, the main features of which were as follows: That during February and March, 1896, Birdsall was hiring livery teams from one Buckley with which to prosecute the business of [573]

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Blasl v. Peterson
53 N.W.2d 856 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1952)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
75 N.W. 923, 7 N.D. 569, 1898 N.D. LEXIS 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/q-w-loverin-browne-co-v-bank-of-buffalo-nd-1898.