Court Opinion

ID: 6439017
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-25 12:15:13.707357+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:52:30.497158
License: Public Domain

Pierce, J.
This is an action of contract to recover on an account annexed the sum of $598, with interest from January 1, 1928. The plaintiff alleged that certain fur goods were sold to the defendant. At the trial it was agreed that the prices for which these goods were sold were fair and reasonable, and if the defendant owed anything to the plaintiff he owed the sum claimed by the plaintiff in the account stated. The case was tried in the Superior Court to a jury. At the close of the plaintiff’s evidence the defendant rested and presented a motion that on all the evidénce a verdict be directed for the defendant. The motion was allowed, and the case is before us on the exception of the plaintiff thereto.
The facts in their aspect most favorable to the plaintiff’s contention, as they warrantably could have been found by the jury, are as follows: The president of the plaintiff corporation had known and dealt with the defendant for many years. All the goods stated in the account annexed were sold and delivered to the defendant in the months of February, May, July, September and November, 1927. Since *374these sales and deliveries the president of the plaintiff corporation and the defendant had talked many times about the account. Two days before the trial the defendant said to the plaintiff’s president, in substance, that he did not question the amount of the bill at all, that he did not pay it because he did not have the money. The account was carried on the books of the plaintiff in the name of Butkovitz Fur Company, and the items were delivered to the place of business of Butkovitz Fur Company. The business transactions were with the defendant, Philip Butkovitz, and all conversations in respect to the goods sold and delivered were with him only. The plaintiff’s president supposed when he sold the goods to the defendant that the defendant was doing business under the name of Butkovitz Fur Company. He had no knowledge that the defendant was one of the incorporators of the Butkovitz Fur Company, Inc., a Massachusetts corporation chartered May 17, 1926, and dissolved in December, 1927; and he had no knowledge when the items of the account were sold and delivered that Butkovitz was doing business as a corporation under the name and style of Butkovitz Fur Company, Inc. The defendant paid the bills which he owed the plaintiff during the year 1926 by cash, and by checks made out in the name of Butkovitz Fur Company. He paid $4,000 in checks in 1927, and gave the plaintiff notes signed Butkovitz Fur Company; he did not give checks or sign notes for the year 1927 in the name of Butkovitz Fur Company, Inc.
On the foregoing facts it is plain the jury could find that the defendant did not disclose to the plaintiff that the items of goods purchased were bought by him as agent for the Butkovitz Fur Company, Inc., and that the plaintiff did not know such was the fact. In these circumstances it is settled that the agent of the undisclosed principal may be treated as principal. Merriam v. Wolcott, 3 Allen, 258. New London Ship & Engine Co. v. Simpson, 254 Mass. 76, 78. The evidence should have been submitted to the jury, and the exceptions must be sustained.

Exceptions sustained.