Court Opinion

ID: 3652893
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 06:06:59.965876+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:19:12.953766
License: Public Domain

(167)   The defendant company, resident and doing business in this State, claimed that the plaintiff, also resident *Page 121 
here, was indebted to it for a small balance due on open account. There was an excursion run to Norfolk, Va., on which the plaintiff went, carrying a stock of refreshments. On the same train was A. F. Messick, president of the defendant company, who employed a lawyer in Norfolk, and instructed him to bring action for the said balance due by plaintiff and to attach aforesaid stock of plaintiff to enforce collection of the debt. Being advised by his attorney that it would be necessary to give bond for the attachment, Messick procured a friend to go on said bond, and left for New York that day. The next day, the attorney, without any authority from Messick or the defendant company, of his own accord took out proceedings in arrest and bail, under which the plaintiff was taken into custody, but was soon discharged upon habeas corpus This is an action for false imprisonment.
It appears from the evidence that the attorney was employed for the specific purpose of attaching the goods of the plaintiff, a proceeding authorized by the laws of Virginia, as Messick was advised by said attorney, and there is no evidence that any other process or proceeding was authorized or discussed, or that the subsequent arrest of plaintiff was with the knowledge, consent, procurement, or ratification of the said Messick. A recent case, exactly in point, is Moore v. Cohen,128 N.C. 345, in which the Court held that "A client is bound by the acts of his counsel in the ordinary course of procedure and in matters pertaining to that action, such as judgments, decrees and orders therein; but a plaintiff is not responsible for any illegal action taken or directed by the attorney which the plaintiff did not advise, consent to, or participate in, and which was not justified by any authority he had given," citing Cooley on Torts, 131, and Walsh v. Cochran, 63 N.Y. 181, 20 Am.Rep., 519, and other cases there mentioned. To same purport isWallow v. Finberg, 46 Tex. 35; and many other cases  (168) might easily be added.
There are divers other exceptions, but they do not require discussion. The exceptions for refusal to admit certain segregated portions of the answer offered in evidence by the plaintiff became immaterial by the subsequent tender by plaintiff of the whole paragraph containing such extracts and its admission by the court. Cheek v. Lumber Co., 134 N.C. 227. It was not necessary to put the pleadings in evidence to show that certain allegations in the complaint were not denied in the answer. That was a matter of law for the court. Code, sec. 268.
The other exceptions are to the exclusion of his agency, and are without merit. That an agency must be proven aliunde the declarations of the alleged agent is elementary law (Grandy v. Ferebee, 68 N.C. 362; Taylorv. Hunt, 118 N.C. 173), and this is true both as to the *Page 122 
establishment of the agency and the nature and extent of the authority. Huffcutt Agency, sec. 137; Hatch v. Squires, 11 Mich. 185; Mitchum v.Dunlap, 98 Mo., 418. The declarations of a judge in the habeas corpus
proceedings were res inter alios acta and are equally incompetent. The demurrer to the evidence was properly sustained.
No error.
Cited: Sutton v. Lyons, 156 N.C. 6; Cooper v. R. R., 165 N.C. 581;Adams v. Foy, 176 N.C. 696; S. v. Stancill, 178 N.C. 685; Marshall v.Telephone Co., 181 N.C. 298.
(169)