Turner v. Newman
Turner v. Newman
Opinion of the Court
Opinion op the Court by
E. L. Newman was no party plaintiff, nor does he by any pleading ask a judgment or set out a cause of action against Turner, either jointly with T. Newman, or singly. He is made a party to Turner’s cross petition, but does not answer it, and being served with process its allegations as to him should have been taken as true. The joint judgment in favor of M. T. & E. L. Newman for $267.18 cost is not authroized by either pleading or evidence.
The case was previously before this court upon a sustained demurrer to the petition, and all this court then decided was that the petition itself, without the aid of the article of agreement as
Dan’I Newman seems to have been the active agent in selling the land, at least the article of agreement is made in the joint names of D. N. Newman, B. L. Newman and M. L. Newman and signed by them, and the purchase price is payable jointly to them, whether they were joint tenants, or tenants in common, or' coparceners, they held a joint and, we presume, an equal interest in
In this state of dealings each payee must be regarded as the agent for the others, and in all fair transactions, without notice from the other parties, the obligor should be protected in his transactions with either payee.
There were more than one legal reason why this contract should be rescinded, and Dan’l N. Newman violated no legal right nor proved that he colluded with Turner, or made an unfair settlement with him, but M. T. Newman goes on the naked legal principle that Dan’l N. Newman had no right to act as his agent for him, but surely where there is a covenant payable to several the obligor is not bound to partition the payments and see that each gets his part, nor if there should be controversies relative to it, is he bound without, any notification whatever to have all present when he settles with either; in such cases if any of the payees intends to withdraw the presumed agency from his co-obligors he must notify the obligor of such intention. We think, therefore, in the absence of all allegation and proof that the settlement by D. N. Newman, with Turner, was collusive or unfair, and in the absence of any notification to Turner not to settle with him, the settlement should be upheld and the petition dismissed absolutely.
Wherefore, the judgment is reversed, with directions to dismiss the petition absolutely.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.