Court Opinion

ID: 6437201
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-25 12:13:34.509412+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:52:26.258714
License: Public Domain

Carroll, J.
The defendant’s husband on September 22, 1921, signed in his wife’s name a written contract for the purchase of fifty barrels of flour, to be delivered December 1, 1921. On" September 26, 1921, the defendant wrote the plaintiff cancelling the order. It was agreed that the only question for the jury was the defendant’s liability under the written contract executed by her husband in her name. The *461action is for the breach of the contract. In the Superior Court a verdict for the defendant was ordered.
Mrs. Pedro was the owner of a bakery, in which her husband worked as a baker. There was no evidence that he was the defendant’s agent to make the purchase in question or sign the contract. There was nothing in the evidence to show that the relation of principal and agent existed between them.
The plaintiff contends that the contract was ratified by the defendant. It bases this contention on the evidence that a few days after the contract was signed the plaintiff’s agent saw the defendant and her husband at the bakery, and “they told him that they would not accept the flour because they did not want to use the brand of flour mentioned in the contract and that no other reasons were given for "not accepting the flour”; that “he visited the defendant’s place of business several times during the period between the date of the contract and the time within which the flour was to be accepted and that each time they refused to accept the flour for the only given reason that they did not wish to use that brand of flour.” This was not sufficient evidence to establish the defendant’s ratification of the unauthorized contract. She disaffirmed the contract on September 26, within four days after it was made. She in no way approved it and she repudiated it within a reasonable time. Ratification is not to be inferred from the fact that she stated to the plaintiff’s agent that she did not wish to use the plaintiff’s brand of flour. She did not adopt the contract and was not bound to give her reasons for her disaffirmance of it. The husband was not her agent, and she was not estopped by her statements to the plaintiff’s agent from cancelling the contract; see Brown v. Henry; 172 Mass. 559, 568. The plaintiff relies on Boice-Perrine Co. v. Kelley, 243 Mass. 327, Harrod v. McDaniels, 126 Mass. 413, Foster v. Rockwell, 104 Mass. 167, Brigham v. Peters, 1 Gray, 139, 147. We find nothing in these cases to support the plaintiff’s contention.
The defendant did not file a married woman’s certificate under G. L. c. 209, § 10; but this circumstance does not help the plaintiff.

Exceptions overruled.