Bonnet-Brown Sales Service v. Sturdevant
Bonnet-Brown Sales Service v. Sturdevant
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The action was one to recover from a newspaper publisher on two contracts for advertising service furnished by plaintiff. Plaintiff was defeated, and appeals.
The first contract was for service from June 1, 1919, to May 30, 1920, for which defendant promised to pay $66.72 in twelve equal installments of $5.56 each. The balance due on- this contract was $58.86. The second contract was evidenced by two instruments, dated March 19, 1922, which are to be considered together. One instrument obligated plaintiff to furnish service from November 1, 1922, to July 31, 1924. The other was a note signed by defendant for $112.50, payable in monthly installments of $6.25 each, beginning January 1, 1923. Defendant admitted he entered into both contracts, but alleged the first one was canceled and the second was breached by plaintiff. By agreement of parties in open court, no reply was deemed necessary. The cause was submitted on depositions of witnesses for plaintiff and oral testimony of defendant, and the court found that, as a part of the consideration of the second contract, the first contract was canceled when the second was made, and found that the second contract had been broken by plaintiff.
The second contract was taken by an agent of the company, R. C. Edwards. Plaintiff’s evidence was that Edward’s authority was that of a traveling salesman, whose duty consisted in selling the service, taking contracts, subject to approval of the company, which contained the entire agreement of the parties, and transmitting the' contracts to the company for approval. Contracts were accepted on the basis that there were no terms or arrangements other than those contained in the writings forwarded for approval. The second contract contained no reference to cancellation of the indebtedness due on the first contract. Defendant testified Edwards came to his office for the purpose of collecting the amount due on the first contract, and after negotiations, liability on the first contract was canceled as an inducement to and as part of the consideration for the second contract.
As indicated, plaintiff’s evidence was that Edwards was a selling agent, and a selling agent has no authority to collect. Assuming, however, Edwards came to defendant as an agent to collect, such an agent has no apparent authority on which a debtor may rely, to cancel the debt, or compromise it, or discharge it by novation. There was no proof that plaintiff gave Edwards express authority to make the kind of arrangement which defendant claims he made, and without express authority, the agent could do nothing which would discharge the indebtedness arising under the first contract, except receive the full amount of money due. The result is, defendant’s' indebtedness under the first contract was not discharged.
The judgment of the district court is reversed, and the cause is remanded with direction to enter judgment for plaiixtiff on the first cause of action stated in the petition.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.