Copeland v. Touchstone
Copeland v. Touchstone
Opinion of the Court
It certainly cannot be assumed, that because the work was done ai the shop of the defendant, he is entitled to recover for it. Copeland contracted with Richardson, in utter ignorance of the relation which existed between him and his employer, Touchstone. Conceding, then, that as
Judge Story, in his work on Agency, p. 439, § 430, says— “ The modes and circumstances under which such payments are made to the agent may have a material bearing on the rights of the principal. If the payments are received by the agent according to the ordinary course of business, or even if they are made out of the ordinary course of business, if the agent alone is known or is supposed to be the principal, the latter will be bound thereby. Mr. Pailey lays down the same doctrine. “ If” says he, “ the agent act for a principal undisclosed, he has authority to receive payment.” Until the principal appears, the agent is to be regarded as the proprietor.— Liv. on Agency, 226—232; Faveric v. Bennett, 11 East. 38; Coates v. Lewis, 1 Camp. Rep. 444; Blackburn v. Schoales, 2 ib. 341; Stewart v. Aberdein, 4 Mees. & Welsb. 211; see also The Governor v. Dailey, 14 Ala. Rep. 469—472.
So, in the case before us, the parly dealing with the journeyman, having no notice of the fact that he was working for the defendant in error, and having made to him full payment before he was informed by the defendant that he claimed the price of the work, must be considered as discharged from any obligation to pay the money over again to the principal.— Smith’s Mercantile Law, 129.
It results from what we have said, that the County Court mistook the law in holding the plaintiff in error liable for the payment he had previously made to Richardson.
The judgment is consequently reversed, and the cause remanded.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.