Wilmerding v. Postal Telegraph Cable Co.

118 A.D. 685, 103 N.Y.S. 594, 1907 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 737
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedApril 5, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 118 A.D. 685 (Wilmerding v. Postal Telegraph Cable Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilmerding v. Postal Telegraph Cable Co., 118 A.D. 685, 103 N.Y.S. 594, 1907 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 737 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinions

Clarke, J.:

The plaintiffs are members of a copartnership known as Wilmerding, Morris & Mitchell, engaged .in business in the city of New York. The defendant is a domestic corporation conducting a general telegraph business. The course of dealing between plaintiffs and defendant, continuing for about ten years, has been as follows: When the plaintiffs desired to send a telegram they would ring the messenger call in their store and a messenger would' be dispatched from the local office of the defendant in the neighborhood,, under the charge of one, Morrell, who would receive the message and carry it to the telegraph .office where it would be dispatched in the regular course of business; Upon the following day a messenger from the defendant’s office woiild present to plaintiffs’ assistant cashier in charge of the petty cash, one White, a printed slip or form headed “ message memorandum,” containing the date and the words [687]*687“ To Postal Telegraph-Gable Company. For convenience in verifying accounts, please preserve the following items of messages sent.” There would then follow “ To,” the address being written in, followed by the amount of the charge and opposite the word signature,” inclosed in brackets, the name of the person sending the message. These slips were made out by the telegraph company and the name appended thereto was not a signature but was for the purposes of identification and in the genuine slips was written by the agent in charge of the defendant’s' office. Upon the presentation of the slip, which performed the function of a bill, to the cashier in charge of the petty cash, the amount called for thereon was given to the messenger in payment of the services rendered and the slip was kept as a voucher by the plaintiffs.

During the seven months under consideration in this action a large number of slips upon which payments were made were presented by and the amounts called for thereon paid to a messenger of the defendant, who was between sixteen and eighteen years of age, named Murphy, and the balance by one other boy not particularly described or identified, but it appears that all of the slips were presented by one or other of these two boys sent by the defendant and known to the assistant cashier. During this period 517 slips were thus presented for payment and $709.49 were paid thereon to these two messengers. Upon investigation it appeared that 199 of these slips upon which were paid $117.50 were slips made out by the operator, Morrell, and represented charges for services by the defendant for transmission of telegrams for the plaintiffs and for which the defendant gave credit to the plaintiffs. ' Three hundred and eighteen slips upon which $592.99 were paid to the messenger boys were forged memoranda and were fictitious in that no services were rendered by the defendant for the plaintiffs in accordance with the tenor of said forged or fictitious memoranda. It is for said sum so paid that this action was brought and for which judgment in favor of the plaintiffs has been entered, from which this appeal is taken.

The question is, is the defendant responsible to the plaintiffs for the dishonesty of its messengers ? It is conceded that so far as the genuine slips are concerned, made out by the defendant’s agent, Morrell, in charge of its office and given by him to the messengers, [688]*688they were thereby constituted the agents of the defendant for the purpose of collecting from the plaintiffs the amounts due for services rendered as appeared upon the face of such slips; that if after payment by the plaintiffs to such messengers upon such genuine slips the messengers had appropriated the sums paid themselves, or having transmitted the money to the office, the agent there in charge had appropriated it to himself the defendant would have been liable, for the collections would have been within the direct scope of the employment of the agent and the principal, for the agent’s wrongdoing, would have been obliged to respond. But the defendant claims that these messengers were not in any sense the general agents of the defendant; that their employment was limited to the presentation of the genuine slips as given to them by the general agent, Morrell, and the collection of the sums called for thereby, and that when they forged slips and upon such forged slips collected and appropriated the sums apparently called for they acted independently and outside of their respective agencies, and that, therefore, the defendant is not liable for such fraudulent conduct.

It seems to me that this contention is not sound; that the liability of the- principal does not depend upon the general agency of the agent but upon the question whether the acts, done were within the. apparent scope of the authority of the.agent, and that when it had clothed these messengers with the power to present slips and receive payment therefor, it is responsible for the wrongful acts of such agents committed in that kind of work. The fictitious slips were intermingled with the genuine. They were both presented by- the same boys to the same assistant cashier in the same ordinary way in which the dealings between the parties had been conducted for a very considerable period of time. The plaintiffs had the right to assume that the agents of the defendant, admittedly employed by it and clothed with the power to collect money on the presentation of slips; were honest and that the slips presented by them were genuine.

The assistant cashier testified that at the time he paid these slips he “ thought they were in the operator’s handwriting—seeing that handwriting every day I got accustomed to it looking at it.” He did not send the telegrams or ring for the messengers. He was in. [689]*689charge of the petty cash disbursements of the business. He had been in the habit of receiving these slips from these same boys and of paying them for a long time, and there was nothing which excited his suspicion, there was nothing out of the common which put him upon his inquiry..

An employer who has put it within the power of his employee to defraud a third person by intermingling fraudulent and genuine bills and collecting money therefrom, should be held responsible to an innocent third party for the dishonesty of his employee.

It is unnecessary to cite numerous authorities because, as it seems to me, the recent case of Birkett v. Postal Telegraph-Cable Co. (107 App. Div. 115;. affd. unanimously, 186 H. T. 591, without an opinion) is conclusive. The defendant seeks to distinguish that case from the one at bar, because in the Birkett case the agent was a general agent in charge of the office of the defendant. Conceding that the messengers in the case at bar were not the general agents of the defendant, yet, when acting within the scope of their authority, the same rule applies as to a general agent, and, as to third parties, when a special agent acts within the apparent scope of his authority the rule of responsibility is the same. These messengers having the direct authority to collect upon genuine slips, presenting, intermingled with said genuine slips, forged slips not distinguishable upon ordinary examination from the genuine slips, their acts were within the apparent scope of their authority and hence the Birkett case is applicable. In that case Harrington was the agent in charge of the defendant’s office in Penn Yan.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
118 A.D. 685, 103 N.Y.S. 594, 1907 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 737, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilmerding-v-postal-telegraph-cable-co-nyappdiv-1907.