Markley v. Sheatz
Opinion of the Court
This case is here on a second writ of error, raising again the question of McMahon’s authority to bind his company by accepting a partial assignment of its debt, before decided adversely to the plaintiff on grounds appearing in an opinion reported
At the trial the court submitted to the jury the question of McMahon’s authority to bind the company by his-acceptance of the partial assignment. After judgment for the plaintiff the case came here on writ of error.
This court followed closely the rule in federal courts that unless a debtor agrees to accept the partial assignment of a debt due by him, he is not bound thereby, Mandeville v. Welch, 5 Wheat. 277, 5 L. Ed. 87; 1 Rose’s Notes (Rev. Ed.) 1041; 2 R. C. L. 618, § 26; and, holding the plaintiff must prove that the company had accepted Markley’s and Miller’s assignment, inquired into McMahon’s authority to speak for the company.
This court found that the evidence did not disclose express authority from the company to McMahon so to bind the company, or any authority to be gathered from conduct of the company in holding out McMahon as its agent or officer. Neither could it’ discover ratification by the company of McMahon’s unauthorized act. The judgment was reversed and a new trial awarded. The plaintiff at the second trial sought to cure the defects in the evidence of the first trial by proving not only what he had proved before but something more. This he regarded as sufficient to establish McMahon’s authority. The learned trial judge was of another opinion and accordingly directed a verdict for the defendant.- Hence the present writ of error.
In reaching a decision on this writ of error, we have taken the case on the first writ as the starting point and have pursued the inquiry whether on j:jae second trial there was enough new evidence to raise the case out of its situation at the first trial. This involved an appreciation of all the facts and admissible inferences in the case for the purpose of determining whether there was evidence which, if it had
This controversy had its beginning in the affairs of the International Lumber & Development Company. While wrongdoing is not, in this instance, imputed to any of the parties before us, reference to what were at least informalities in the business transactions of that adventurous concern explains the difficulty this court has twice had in reaching a decision. The difficulty is, perhaps, one of judicial procedure. If no rights were involved except those of the actors in the transaction and we were at liberty to follow their line of conduct in all its irregularities, we might, in a search for equities, incline to the conclusion insisted upon by the plaintiff. If, however, we are to follow rules of law — as we must — and, laying them on the transaction as we find it, determine the law of the case by their measure, we are driven to a result which, though involving hardship, is nevertheless inevitable. The trouble, we feel, is with the case, not with the law.
Feeling that the court might not find authority expressly given by the company to McMahon, as its secretary and treasurer, to execute a contract on its behalf imposing on it the exceptional obligation of paying a part of its debt to one other than its creditor, the plaintiff at the second trial introduced evidence to show such authority from conduct of the company in holding out McMahon as its general officer or managing agent vested with power, prima facie, to do anything which the company could authorize or ratify. Bearing on the question of McMahon’s authority derived from conduct of the company in holding him out as one clothed with such authority, counsel for the plaintiff, by commendable diligence, have called to our attention many cases. We shall not stop to pass them in review. It is enough to say that we have attentively considered them in close relation with the evidence. This evidence, or so much of it as is new and therefore to be weighed with the evidence which at the first trial we thought insufficient, consists mainly of an estimate by McMahon’s secretary of the breadth of his authority gathered from the diversity of his transactions. These transactions relate chiefly to the sale of stock— apparently the company’s main business — with reference to which McMahon had a contract with the company in whose performance there arose the next new matter introduced in evidence, namely, the adjustment of death claims, payment for which McMahon, under his contract, was liable. Hence his active interest in dealing with counsel
On the two writs of error coming here, the plaintiff has had the advantage of the court being differently constituted on each writ. Yet the court as how composed, after a careful study of the present record in comparison with the former one, is .forced, as before, to the conclusion that the evidence, had it been submitted, would not have sustained a verdict for the plaintiff.
This conclusion renders discussion of the remaining assignments of error unnecessary.
The judgment below is affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- MARKLEY v. SHEATZ
- Cited By
- 8 cases
- Status
- Published