Turnbull v. Northwestern Terra Cotta Co.

49 N.W. 229, 46 Minn. 513, 1891 Minn. LEXIS 379
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJuly 7, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 49 N.W. 229 (Turnbull v. Northwestern Terra Cotta Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Turnbull v. Northwestern Terra Cotta Co., 49 N.W. 229, 46 Minn. 513, 1891 Minn. LEXIS 379 (Mich. 1891).

Opinion

Gilfillan, C. J.

Whether plaintiff should recover the amount claimed in his complaint, or defendant recover the counterclaim alleged in its answer, was, by agreement on the trial, made to depend on the character of the plaintiff’s agency. He claimed that it gave him the exclusive right to make sales, at a specified commission to him, of defendant’s wares within the cities of St. Paul and Minneapolis, so that he would be entitled to the commission on sales made [514]*514by the defendant itself. The defendant claims that he was merely authorized to make such sales as he could, and was to receive pay only for such as he made. The direct evidence as to the character of the agency was that of the plaintiff and of the president of the defendant, and was flatly contradictory. What the agent did, and the manner of doing it, known to and acted on by his principal, the letters and telegrams between them relating to the business, what was said by the president in introducing plaintiff to anticipated customers, and whatever would tend to show the situation as it was known to both parties, was competent upon the question. The objection urged against the evidence of that character goes rather to its weight than its admissibility. It was not very important; it certainly left the question in doubt; but the jury might consider that, so far as it went, it supported plaintiff’s version of the agreement creating the agency. The instructions of the court excepted to did not go beyond so charging the jury, and were correct. The evidence justified the verdict.

Order affirmed.

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Related

Cornell v. N. F. C. Engineering Co.
144 N.W.2d 369 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1966)
Aluminum Products Co. v. Anderson
164 N.W. 663 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1917)
Mabray v. Kelly-Goodfellow Shoe Co.
73 Mo. App. 1 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1898)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
49 N.W. 229, 46 Minn. 513, 1891 Minn. LEXIS 379, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turnbull-v-northwestern-terra-cotta-co-minn-1891.