Myers v. Entriken
Myers v. Entriken
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was. delivered by
The usage of factors, said to prevail in Pittsburgh, to sell on account of their principal, take notes in their own names with an agreement to renew, and discount them for their own accommodation as long as the bank is willing, is a gross imposition, which can never be sanctioned by a court of justice. In this instance the defendants, who-are commission merchants, sold at four, six and eight months; took the purchasers’ notes in their own name, and discounted them in bank for their own use. Pursuant to a secret agreement with the purchasers, they were renewed, as they fell due, by other notes drawn and endorsed in the same way, till the period of the purchasers’ bankruptcy, which occurred eight months and a fetv days after the sale. There cannot be a doubt that the plaintiff below was entitled to the produce of the discounted notes; but the defendants, in place of remitting it to him, employed it in their own business, and now insist that the accommodation was at the plaintiff’s risk! It is said the sale was made for a better price than could have been had at a short credit, and that no sale of the article could have been effected on any other terms. Be it so. But why was not the produce of the notes remitted, and why was not the plaintiff suffered to have the use of his own money 1 The temptation to abuse, afforded by the usage, is too strong to be tolerated. The greater the number of renewals, the better for the factor, who would have not only his commission, but the use of the money in the mean time; and all at the risk of the principal! Surely, that cannot be the law. Nothing is more familiar thanjhat the principal is to have all the increase made on his property; and it was held in Rogers v. Boehm, (2 Esp. Ca. 704), that an agent is liable for interest, where any has been made, on a balance in his hands. Such is the general rule, though in England there are exceptions to it, where, for instance, the principal was informed of the state of the case, but desired the agent to keep a large balance in hand, as in Chedworth v. Edwards, (8 Vez. 48), or where the accumulation was known to the principal for a great length of time, as in Beaumont v. Boultbee, (11 Vez. 360). Such, however, would scarce be held the rule of interest in Pennsylvania. In Diplock v. Blackburn, (3 Camp. 43), Lord Eblenborcugh said, that a usage authorizing an agent to make a profit by a bill on his principal, is a “ usage of fraud and plunder,” and not to be tolerated. We are not here, however, on a question of interest or profit made, but on a question whether the defendants did not make the notes their own, by using them as their own. The point seems almost to have been determined
Judgment affirmed.
Reference
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- Myers against Entriken
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