Chambers Bros. & Co. v. Lubke
Chambers Bros. & Co. v. Lubke
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
The sale of whisky was for prices below the maximum fixed by appellants, and was in violation of the authority given to Morse; but after it was made, and an account thereof rendered to appellants, they, in their letter of the 16th of November, 1870, addressed to Morse, express the opinion that he did the best he could with the whisky, and directed him in that letter to take up their acceptance for 970.45, to mature in St. Louis, and to draw on them at 30 days for the balance of account, or in other words, for the difference between the price realized for the whisky and the amount of their acceptance for $970.45.
This was an appropriation of the money arising from the sale, and a complete ratification of the acts of Morse in the transaction.
Certainly, if even sfter this ratification, appellants had discovered that Morse had committed a fraud, and had actually received more for appellants’ property than he accounted for, or by fraud or through negligence sold the goods below their market value, he might have been held liable therefor. But the evidence fails to establish fraud or culpable negligence on Morse.
The judgment must be affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.