Wachob, Bender & Co. v. Omaha Life Insurance

258 N.W. 657, 128 Neb. 320, 1935 Neb. LEXIS 33
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 30, 1935
DocketNo. 29067
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 258 N.W. 657 (Wachob, Bender & Co. v. Omaha Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wachob, Bender & Co. v. Omaha Life Insurance, 258 N.W. 657, 128 Neb. 320, 1935 Neb. LEXIS 33 (Neb. 1935).

Opinion

Eldred, District Judge.

This is an action brought by Waehob, Bender & Company, plaintiff and appellee, a corporation engaged in dealing in municipal and corporate bonds, as owner, broker and agent for others, in the district court for Douglas county, against Omaha Life Insurance Company, a corporation, defendant and appellant, engaged in life insurance business, to recover damages for losses sustained on account of the failure of the defendant to take up and pay for certain bonds purchased by plaintiff as agent and broker' for the defendant. The amended petition alleges that the plaintiff purchased for the defendant, at the defendant’s request, certain school district bonds of the face value of $30,000; that the plaintiff, at the request of the defendant, advanced the funds for the purchase of said bonds, in the sum of $30,797.43, under the agreement that they would be taken up and paid for by the defendant within sixty days; that the defendant failing to take up said bonds, as agreed, plaintiff thereafter sold the same for the aggregate sum of $26,000, being the market price and the highest available price for said bonds; the plaintiff sustaining a loss by reason thereof in the sum of $4,797.43.

The answer of the defendant denied that E. M. Searle, Jr., president of the defendant company, by whom it is claimed the bonds were purchased for the defendant, had any authority to make such purchase, and, further, that the alleged contract sued upon was within the statute of frauds, and void.

For reply, plaintiff denied that it had any knowledge of lack of authority on the part of Searle to make such purchase, and by way of estoppel alleged that, during a period of more than four years prior to the transaction in question, said Searle had purchased, on the defendant’s behalf, of the plaintiff, bonds to the total value of $150,000, and that it relied upon such previous transactions in accepting the order of Searle for the purchase of the bonds involved herein.

At the close of the trial the defendant moved the court [322]*322to discharge the jury and enter a judgment of dismissal. The jury were thereupon discharged, and the court later, to wit, August 23, 1933, entered a finding and judgment for the plaintiff against the defendant for $4,797.43. The motion for a new trial was overruled and the defendant appeals.

' In support of its appeal, the appellant, by its brief, presents four propositions of law for consideration.

First, it is contended that the contract is void under the statute of frauds (Comp. St. 1929, sec. 69-404) relating to contracts to sell' or a sale of any goods or choses in action of the value of $500 or upwards.

Plaintiff’s cause of action is not founded upon a contract of purchase and sale; but the foundation of plaintiff’s claim is that the plaintiff was employed by the defendant, as agent or broker, to purchase for the defendant certain school bonds of the face value of $30,000, and at defend-apt’s request advanced the necessary funds for such purchase under the agreement with the defendant, that the defendant would take said bonds and pay for them within sixty days. The trial court made special findings, two of which are as follows:

“The court'specifically finds that the plaintiff herein as the agent or broker of the defendant purchased for the defendant and at defendant’s request the bonds described in plaintiff’s petition, and that the plaintiff, at the request of the defendant, advanced the funds for the purchase of said bonds, under the agreement of the defendant to take them up and pay for them in sixty days.
“The court finds that the plaintiff was not the owner of said bonds at the time, but thereafter purchased them for and on behalf of the defendant from Wheelock & Company, the then owners of said bonds.”

The contract for the bonds was made in the office of the president of the plaintiff company, the' negotiations being carried on between Frank J. Bender, on behalf of the plaintiff, and E. M. Searle, Jr., president of the defendant company, on behalf of the defendant, but in the presence [323]*323of James T. Wachob. The testimony of Bender and Wachob substantiates the findings of the trial court. E. M- Searle, Jr., who participated in the transaction, on behalf of the defendant, did not testify.

After full examination of the record, this court concludes that the clear preponderance of the evidence sustains the findings of the trial court above set forth.

The plaintiff, as agent of the defendant, purchased, at defendant’s request, the school bonds involved herein for the defendant; and at the request of the defendant advanced the funds necessary to pay the purchase price under the agreement that the bonds would be taken up and paid for within sixty days. This did not constitute a contract of sale between the plaintiff and defendant, but a contract of agency; and, in such case, the statute of frauds (Comp. St. 1929, sec. 69-404) is not applicable. Wiger v. Carr, 131 Wis. 584; Hatch v. McBrien, 83 Mich. 159; Libaire v. Feinstein, 231 N. Y. Supp. 3; Campbell v. Willis, 290 Fed. 271; London v. Smith, 101 S. Car. 340; Mason v. Spiller, 186 Mass. 346.

By appellant’s proposition of law number three it is urged: “An agent authorized to purchase property for his principal must not, except with the principal’s full knowledge and consent, purchase the property from himself either directly or indirectly; and in accordance with this rule an agent employed to purchase cannot, without the principal’s full knowledge and consent, purchase the property for himself and then resell it to the principal at an advance.”

. Such proposition does not arise in this case. The evidence would not justify a finding that the agent purchased the property bought for the defendant from itself. The last paragraph of the special findings of the trial court, heretofore set forth, which we have found to be sustained by a preponderance of the evidence, disposes of this contention.

Proposition of law number two, of appellant, is based upon the provisions of section 44-314, Comp. St. 1929, providing: “No investment, sale or loan, except loans on [324]*324its own policies shall be made, which has not first been authorized by the board of directors, or by a committee thereof, charged with the duty of investing or loaning the funds of the company.”

From the testimony of the secretary-treasurer of the Omaha Life Insurance Company it appears that the minute book of the company does not show any action taken by its board of directors with reference to the purchase of the bonds involved herein, and the minutes do not show that E. M. Searle, Jr., president, or any other person, was authorized to purchase those bonds on behalf .of the defendant, nor that the board of directors at any time constituted a committee of one or more persons delegated with authority to make investments in bonds. Mr. Searle, the president, handled primarily bonds and investments. From the testimony of the secretary-treasurer it appears that the general procedure was that E. M. Searle, Jr., president of the company, was the active officer who did the negotiating for the bonds, and prices to be paid, and then submitted it to the board of directors.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
258 N.W. 657, 128 Neb. 320, 1935 Neb. LEXIS 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wachob-bender-co-v-omaha-life-insurance-neb-1935.