Supreme Court of Missouri, 1866

Yeatman v. Corder

Yeatman v. Corder
Supreme Court of Missouri · Decided July 15, 1866 · Holmes, Lovelace, Wagner
38 Mo. 337

Yeatman v. Corder

Opinion of the Court

Wagner, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was an action commenced by the plaintiffs in error, who were commission merchants, and as such sold, in 1857, at St. Louis, 117 bales of hemp, which had been sent to them by John Corder, the intestate of defendant in error.. The hemp was shipped from Waverly, Lafayette county, on the 2d of March, 1857, and was received by the plaintiffs on the 6th of March, and they made sale of the same on the 16th of the same month to the S't. Louis Bagging and Rope Company. Accompanying the shipment was a letter of instruction requesting the plaintiffs to sell on the levee for the best possible price. When the hemp was received, plaintiffs were unable to make sale for what they believed it was worth, and considering the prospects good for a speedy advance, in cónsequence of the receipts being cut off by cold weather, concluded to store it a few days, and immediately notified Corder of their action. They were not mistaken in their calculations, and after having it in store for about one week they sold it for a largely increased price over what they were offered for it when it was landed on the levee. The sale was made by sample in the usual course and custom of the trade. The exterior of the bales looked well and had the appearance of a sound merchantable article ; but when they were opened, the hemp in the inner part was found to be dirty, rotten and matted, and almost worthless. The Bagging and Rope Company, the purchasers, sued the plaintiffs for reclamation, and recovered off of them upwards of *341seven hundred dollars as damages. When suit was instituted against plaintiffs they notified Corder of the fact and requested him to defend the same; but this he neglected to do. This áutíón is'now prosecuted to recover and obtain the amount which plaintiffs were compelled to pay in consequence of the damaged condition of the hemp ; and the principal, and, in fact, the real defence set up, is, that the plaintiffs as agents violated their instructions and stored the hemp before sale, when they were ordered to sell on the levee.

It is undoubtedly true that whenever an agent violates his instructions, by going beyond his authority, or by acts of negligence, omission or misconduct, and the principal sustains damage by reason thereof, the agent will be liable without regard to the motives which, actuated him. But if, in consequence of a deception practised on him by his principal, he innocently incurs a risk or responsibility, and is compelled to pay damages to a purchaser on account thereof, he will be entitled to a remuneration from his principal — Sto. Ag. § 839; Southern v. How, Bridg. 126; Cro. Jac. 468.

It has been argued here with great earnestness, that the principal being notified of the action of the agents in storing the hemp and making no objection, and afterwards receiving the proceeds, must be presumed to have ratified the act of the agents. But this question is not important to be considered ; in truth, it has nothing to do with the case as presented. Had the instructions been literally carried out, the liability of the principal would have been the same. He ship ped to the plaintiffs as his agents a large quantity of hemp; he said nothing about its inferior quality; the inherent defects and worthless character of the article was cunningly concealed; and the agents were fully warranted and justified in supposing that the outward portions of the bales, as exposed to the common view, contained a fair representation of its quality. They sold, according to custom, by sample, and by the principal’s deception they were made the unconscious instruments of a fraud for which they were compelled to respond in damages. It would be an outrage on common *342justice and a reproach to the law to permit the principal to shield himself from his just liability on the ground that the agents had not implicitly obeyed the instructions and sold on the levee. This principle of law cannot be invoked for his protection ; it is not applicable to the case.

The great complaint that the principal, Corder, seems to make in his defence, is, that he failed successfully to consummate the base fraud which he attempted to perpetrate. As we have indicated our views of the law which must govern the case on a new trial, it will not be necessary to notice the instructions in detail.

The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.

Judge Holmes concurs; Judge Lovelace absent.

Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.