Cathcart v. Keirnaghan
Cathcart v. Keirnaghan
Opinion of the Court
The cases of Meadows v. and Enty v. Mills & Beach, hold, that in a sale at auction, although an entry made by an auctioneer himself, may bind the purchaser, one made by his clerk does not, unless the purchaser gave special authority to the clerk, or assented to his act; because, a special confidence is reposed in the auctioneer, which he cannot delegate to a clerk, so as to bind a third person. The former of these cases rests safely upon another ground, that the entry there made, showed neither the thing sold, nor the price: and in the latter, it does
In Wright v. Dannah it was held, that the agent contera-plated by the statute, must be some third person, and that therefore, an entry made by the seller himself, overlooked by the purchaser, was not binding on the purchaser. In consequence of this, as was supposed, it was held in Far ¿brother v. Simmons, that in an action by the auctioneer against the purchaser, an entry made by the auctioneer himself, would not serve. In Bird v. Boulter, however, (where the circumstances of the sale were very similar to those of the case before us,) Farebrother v. Simmons is regretted if not questioned ; and in another action by auctioneer against purchaser, an entry made by the auctioner’s clerk was held to be an entry by a third person, binding on the purchaser. The observations there made, léave no doubt that the clerk’s entry would have been considered sufficient in an action by the principal seller, against the purchaser. “ The clerk was not an automaton, but a person known to all to be engaged in the sale, and employed by one who told him to put down his name. In an action brought by the auctioneer, the clerk must be considered his agent, for the purpose of taking down, the names, and also the agent of the several persons in the room for the same purpose.. It is not necessary to suppose
If in every case like this, then, the authority for the clerk to sign the purchaser’s name, must not be necessarily implied, where, within the view of all bidders, a clerk is employed, to whom the names of purchasers, with their bids, are announced aloud, it is clear that the authority of the purchaser may be given to the clerk, before or at the time of entry, and that a subsequent assent of the purchaser, may confirm an entry made without authority. The evidence given' in this case, to show the authority or assent of the purchaser, should have gone to the jury ; and therefore, the ground upon which the non-suit was ordered, is insufficient to sustain it.
As to the other ground of the motion for non-suit, the insufficiency of the memorandum to show the terms of the contract, the Circuit Judge was with the plaintiff, and the report does not enable this Court to perceive clearly what the sale book contained, what was after the sale put in writing, or what occurred between the auctioneer or his clerk and the purchaser. The whole contract must be in writing, but it may be in detached parcels connected by reference. When the terms of sale are expressed by a statute, or an order of court, a very slight reference may serve to introduce the certainty, which the statute or order would give.
The motion is granted.
Motion granted.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.