Ubaldini v. C. I. T. Corp.

186 A. 198, 122 Pa. Super. 428, 1936 Pa. Super. LEXIS 125
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 4, 1936
DocketAppeal, 38
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 186 A. 198 (Ubaldini v. C. I. T. Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ubaldini v. C. I. T. Corp., 186 A. 198, 122 Pa. Super. 428, 1936 Pa. Super. LEXIS 125 (Pa. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

Opinion bv

Parker, J.,

The C. I. T. Corporation caused a judgment to be confessed against Louis Ubaldini on a negotiable promissory note containing a warrant of attorney authorizing such confession after maturity. The court below opened the judgment, framed an issue in which Ubaldini was made plaintiff and submitted the cause to a jury which made special findings of fact. Among the questions submitted to the jury and the answers were the following: “1. Did Defendant, Louis Ubaldini, pay the money due under said note, to wit: $755 to the rightful owner thereof? Answer, Yes. 2. Did the C. I. T. Corporation authorize or direct the Sutter-Nash Company to accept payments on any note given to it and purchased by the C. I. T. Corporation? Answer, Yes. 3. Did the C. I. T. Corporation authorize or direct the Sutter-Nash Company to collect the $755 on the note in question? Answer, Yes.” The appellant contends that there was not sufficient evidence to support the findings of .the jury and that it is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.

The sole matter with which we are concerned on this appeal involves a question of implied agency. Was the Sutter-Nash Motor Company the agent of C. I. T. Corporation for the purpose of receiving payments on ac *430 count of the note? We will refer to the evidence supporting the.findings as we are required to do in a case of this nature. On March 16, 1931 Ubaldini purchased from Sutter-Nash Motor Company a Nash sedan for the price of $1,165, turning in a used car for which he was credited with $410 and giving the note in question dated March 18, 1931, payable $500 April 1, $127.50 May 1, and $127.50 June 1, for the balance of the purchase price. At the same time the parties entered into a bailment lease covering the automobile. We will assume that on or about March 21,1931, the motor company for a valuable consideration transferred the note to the finance company and that on the same day the C. I. T. Corporation gave its check to the motor company, the perforations showing that the check was paid by the bank on March 24, 1931. Ubaldini paid to the motor company $500 on April 1, 1931, and $255 on April 16, 1931, without the production of the note in either case. The motor company had over a period of three years prior to March, 1931 financed 500 installment sales to customers and it was the practice for many of these purchasers of cars when payments were due to the finance company to make payment to the motor company, such payments averaging 10 or 15 per week. The motor company at its office used two receipt books, one for its own accounts and one specially provided for payments due the finance company. The finance company knew that this receipt book was kept by the motor company and that when a payment was made to the motor company for the finance company triplicate receipts were made out and one was delivered to the customer, one was transmitted to the finance company and the third was retained by the motor company. The money so received for account of the finance company was on some occasions forwarded forthwith to the finance company and at other times given by the motor company to a collector named Jackson, employed by the finance com *431 pany, which collector regularly called on the motor company for the purpose of receiving and checking up such payments by an examination of the receipt books. The collector would take with him the duplicate receipt and would initial the triplicate receipt to show “that the money was received by O. I. T.” This practice applied to cases where payments were made after notes had been assigned to this finance company and the entire procedure was known to the manager of the local office of the C. I. T. Corporation.

That the note in question was negotiable and in possession of and the property of the finance company when the payments were made and that therefore the maker of the note was required to make payment to the holder is not seriously questioned. The appellee’s answer is that the motor company was the agent of the finance company, that such agency may be implied from the conduct of the parties, that the acquiescence by the finance company in a long series of acts indicated an authorization to perform similar acts in the future. .

The payments of $500 and of the balance of $255 involve somewhat different facts although they are interrelated. We will therefore first consider the legal situation with reference to the $500 payment. The agency asserted is one of implied agency and not that of agency by estoppel. In the case of an implied agency the relation to the principal is implied from the words and conduct of the parties and the circumstances of the particular case. It must be based upon facts for which the principal is responsible (2 C. J. 435). “The fact that a person has acted as agent for another in previous transactions is evidence tending to prove agency to act in a similar transaction”: Dobbs v. Zink, 290 Pa. 243, 247, 138 A. 758. Also see Patterson v. Van Loon, 186 Pa. 367, 40 A. 495.

The burden of proof to establish agency is on him who would avail himself of the act of an agent to prove *432 the authority under which the agent acted: Amer. Car & Foundry Co. v. Alexandria Water Co., 221 Pa. 529, 536, 70 A. 867. It may be shown by actual knowledge, without disavowal, of repeated acts or by a course of conduct of the one assuming to act: Reifsnyder v. Dougherty, 301 Pa. 328, 333, 152 A. 98.

For a period of three years the C. I. T. Corporation had been financing installment sales to customers of the motor company under circumstances identical with that under which Ubaldini dealt with the parties and during that time on an average of 10 or 15 times a week installments had been paid by customers, makers of notes, to the motor company for account of the finance company. Not only did the finance company recognize such payments and not disavow the agency, but it was party to the manner in which receipts were given. With its knowledge receipts were made out in triplicate, one of which was delivered to it and to show that it had actually received the proceeds as between principal and agent it initialed the receipt retained by the motor company. This in our opinion was sufficient to sustain a finding by the jury that the motor company was the implied agent of the O. I. T. Corporation to receive payment of the note in question.

It was not conclusive against the maker of the note that he was not shown to have had knowledge of the manner in which collections were made for the finance company in other cases. “To establish implied agency by acts and declarations of the agent, it was not necessary to show defendant’s [plaintiff’s] knowledge of such acts. Implied agency is actual agency, and the difference between it and express agency is mainly one of method of proof; accordingly it is immaterial whether or not the third person had knowledge of the circumstances relied upon to establish the extent of the authority. In this respect implied authority differs from agency by estoppel where *433 there is no real agency bnt merely circumstances which estop a person from denying the existence of agency”: Dobbs v. Zink, supra, p. 247.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
186 A. 198, 122 Pa. Super. 428, 1936 Pa. Super. LEXIS 125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ubaldini-v-c-i-t-corp-pasuperct-1936.