Inhabitants of Washington v. Eames
Inhabitants of Washington v. Eames
Opinion of the Court
We can see no valid reason for holding that the property in liquors purchased and held by a town agent, under the provisions of St. 1855, c. 215, §§ 5, 6, and Gen. Sts. c. 86, §§ 17-21, does not vest in the town. On the contrary, such a position cannot be maintained without disregarding the ordinary meaning of words, and attributing to them an unusual and extraordinary signification. The fact that the statute designates the person appointed to sell intoxicating liquors as an agent necessarily implies that he is not acting for himself, but for a principal. If we look to the statute to ascertain for whom the agent acts, the language is clear and explicit. He is the agent of the town ; he is to be appointed by the selectmen ; his certificate of authority is to be signed by them, and empowers him, “ as agent of the town,” to purchase and sell liquor at certain designated places therein. It is difficult to see how the relation of principal and agent could be more fully and clearly created and declared than it is by these provisions. If there was any room for doubt as to the intention of the legislature in this respect, it is made entirely clear by the recent enactment in St. 1861, c. 136, by which a town is made liable for the cost of all liquors purchased by their agent and not paid for in cash on delivery, unless express notice is given by the selectmen to the commissioner that no sale is to be made to their agents except for cash. This is a legislative exposition of the previous statute, fully recognizing the relation of principal and agent as subsisting between a town and the person appointed by the selectmen to sell intoxicating liquor within its limits. It follows, that all the legal incidents of agency, where no express provision is made to the contrary, attach and belong to the relation thus created, among which the leading ones are, that the property bought by an agent, acting within .the scope of his authority, belongs to the principal, and the proceeds of the sales of such property received by the agent are to be accounted for to the principal on due demand, after the agency has terminated. Therefore the demurrer to the declaration cannot be sustained for the cause specially assigned, and on which the defendant
That the declaration is defective, both in form and substance, we do not doubt. The proper mode of declaring against an agent for failure or omission of duty in duly accounting for and paying over money belonging to his principal is by an action of contract. 2 Chit. Pl. ubi supra. And for not redelivering property to his principal on the termination of his agency, after due lemand therefor, an action of tort in the nature of trover for a conversion would be the appropriate remedy. The defect in the declaration is, that these two causes of action seem to be blended in one count in an action of tort, and the right of the plaintiffs to recover is stated in the alternative, as either a right to recover the value of the liquors in the hands of the agent at the close of his agency, or a right to an account for the proceeds thereof. But this defect in the declaration is not pointed out by the demurrer, and for that reason the defendant cannot avail himself of it. The practice act, Gen. Sts. c. 129, § 11, provides that to raise an issue in law the answer shall contain a statement that the defendant demurs to the declaration, and shall assign specially the causes of demurrer; and by § 12 it is required “ that the particulars in which the alleged defect
Demwrrer overruled ; judgment for the plaintiffs.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Inhabitants of Washington v. Philip Eames
- Status
- Published