Court Opinion

ID: 8168946
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 21:07:48.039262+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:39:43.601467
License: Public Domain

Powers, J.
This suit results from the shipment to the de*467fendant by the plaintiff of two lots of maple sugar on orders given by the Vermont Maple Sugar & Syrup Company, a concern doing business in the city of New York. The plaintiff had judgment below on facts found by the court, and the defendant argues here only exceptions taken to the findings and to the judgment.
On or about July 18, 1917, the defendant closed a trade with this sugar company for the purchase of the two lots of sugar above referred to. By the terms of this contract, the first lot of four tons was to be delivered at once. The other lot, a car load, was to be delivered later on defendant’s order. The sugar company obtained the four tons from a concern in Low-ville, N. Y., and it was delivered from that point, though on account of delay in shipment the sugar company also directed the plaintiff to send the defendant a like ahiount, which was done. The sugar company opened negotiations with the plaintiff regarding this sugar on July 27, 1917, and its letter of that date authorized the plaintiff to bill the same direct to the defendant, crediting the company with its profit. To this letter the plaintiff replied, quoting a price, and, in effect, agreeing to ship the sugar to the. defendant on the company’s order, to bill it to and make draft on the defendant, and to send the company a check for its profit when the draft was paid. The sugar was ordered by the New York Company and shipped by the plaintiff to the defendant accordingly. The plaintiff sent to the defendant the bills of lading together with bills for the sugar; it charged the same to the defendant on its books; and it credited to the sugar company the difference between its own price and what the defendant was to pay. In due time, the defendant paid the sugar company for the sugar at the price agreed upon with it.
The court below found the fact to be that in these transactions the sugar company acted as the agent of the plaintiff, who was then an undisclosed principal; that the defendant knew nothing of this agency until it received the bills above referred to; and that it then and thereafter until payment as above, only had such knowledge of the agency as it received, or ought to have received, therefrom and certain correspondence that followed.
While it sufficiently appears that the sugar company was not in any general sense an agent of the plaintiff, but was a dealer wholly independent of it, it was, of course, competent for those parties to enter into a special arrangement with reference to a *468particular deal which would result in making the former, pro hao vice, the agent of the latter. As we have seen, however, the contract between the defendant and the sugar company preceded any arrangement between the sugar company and the plaintiff. The first named contract was made and completed, and the rights of the parties thereto became fixed and vested long enough before the alleged agency was created. This being so, no arrangement entered into between the sugar company and the plaintiff alone could relate back to affect the status of the former when, acting for itself, it dealt with the defendant.
For want of supporting evidence, the exception to the finding of agency is sustained. Without this finding, the judgment cannot stand, and will have to be reversed. Whether the plaintiff can recover on the theory of equitable assignment or otherwise are questions not litigated or considered.

Reversed and remanded.