Court Opinion

ID: 4928743
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-09-24 01:03:46.180453+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:14:23.346845
License: Public Domain

Shepley, C. J.
The question presented for decision is, whether the power of attorney made by the defendant on January 20, 1840, authorized Nehemiah Bartlett to make a contract with the plaintiff for the sale of the land described in that contract. He is not expressly authorized to sell the lands in the town of Garland, or to make contracts for their sale, or to make conveyances of them.
Such power to sell can only be implied or inferred from the authority conferred “ to collect and receive all sums of money due to me for said lands, from purchasers or from trespassers, and to make, execute and acknowledge all such contracts as the sales, suits at law, or compromises may require.”
This language shows, that sales had been already made, and that payments therefor were to be made by purchasers. And the attorney is authorized to make, execute, and acknowledge all such contracts as “ the sales” may require. The words *94“ the sales” have reference to the sales already made, being the ones, on which money was to be collected of the purchasers.
When the amount due had been fully paid, he would be authorized to make, execute and acknowledge a contract, providing for an absolute conveyance of the title. There is no indication of an intention to confer an authority, to make new and further sales of the lands, or contracts for such sales.
It is said, that the presumption is, that the defendant made an agreement with the plaintiff for the sale of the land, and that his attorney executed the contract, to carry that agreement into effect.
The sales referred to in the power, were such as were then known to have been made' by some contract, on which payments were expected to be made.
No presumption can be made, that a parol contract, wholly inoperative, was thus made as the foundation of t,his contract. Such a presumption might as well be made in all cases, as in this one : and if made, it would give the attorney an unlimited power to sell the lands. Plaintiff nonsuit.