By the Court.
Daly, F. J.It appeared that Oest carried on the same business, at the same place, under the same title, that of the Washington Bakery, for at least fourteen months anterior to the agreement in writing entered into between him and the defendant. In this agreement the defendant is .declared to be the owner of the fixtures and of the stock in trade, and by if Oest agrees to carry on the business for the defendant’s benefit, who was a grocer, at the compensation of twelve dollars a week, and one-fourth of the profits that might he realized beyond that. How or when the defendant became the owner of the fixtures and of" the stock in trade, did not ap*414pear; but when Oest left for California, a few weeks after the last load of flour was delivered, the defendant gave a bill of sale of the fixtures, stock in trade, tools, &c., to a step-son of Oest— so that the whole transaction looked very like one of those ordinary contrivances by which a debtor, with the aid of a secret principal, seeks to get rid of the responsibility of paying his debts. Be that as it may, the arrangement between defendant and Oest was such as to enable the latter to continue and carry on the business with the outward indication of apparent ownership, of which he made ample use by representing to the plaintiffs that he was the owner of the business, upon which representation they sold him about four hundred dollars’ worth of flour upon credit, all of which was delivered at the bakery, and baked up. The plaintiffs had previously sold Oest flora for cash —and when he sought to buy upon credit, they made inquiries about him ; and as he was recommended to them by other parties, and represented himself to be the owner of the business, they gave him flora upon credit at three different periods between the 20th of Hay and the 1st of July, 1862. In a fortnight after the last load was delivered, Oest left for California, and in a week afterwards the defendant made the bill of sale to Cost’s step-son.
The defendant testified that after the written agreement was entered into between him and Oest, he made a verbal agreement with the latter that he was"to buy for cash only; that if he wanted money he was to come to him, and that he gave him three hundred dollars to buy flour from the plaintiffs, or as he stated it, “ to pay for flour in Broad street.” But the testimony upon this point left it uncertain whether the three hundred dollars, if it ever had been given, was for the flora bought upon credit, or for that which Oest had previously purchased of the plaintiffs for cash, as the defendant stated that he did not know when he gave it. His evidence appears to have been regarded by the justice as unsatisfactory, and it was of such a-loose and uncertain nature as to entitle the justice, in my opinion, to disregard or disbelieve it.
It was said by my former colleague, Judge Woodruff, in Fish v. Wood. 4 E. D. Smith R., 329, where goods purchased by an agent in his own name, even without express authority, (if not purchased upon his exclusive credit,) have come to the use of *415the principal, which is the case here, the vendor, on discovering the principal, may require payment of him. What Judge Woodruff* meant by a pinchase'upon the exclusive credit of the agent, may be illustrated by the cases of Paterson v. Gandasequi, 15 East, 62, and Addison v. Gandasequi, 4 Taun., 574, in which the seller, knowing who the principal was, debited the goods to the agent, thereby indicating that he sold them, not upon the responsibility of the principal, but exclusively upon the credit of the agent. In such a case the seller, with a full knowledge of the facts, concludes to look to the agent and not to the principal—and having thus made his election, the contract is exclusively with the agent.
The rule which applies in a case like the one now before us, was comprehensively stated by Lord Tenderden in Thompson v. Davenport, 9 B. & C., 78. " I take it,” he says, " to be a general rule, that if a person sells goods, supposing at the time of the contract that he is dealing with a principal, but afterwards discovers that the person with whom he is dealing is not the principal in the transaction, but agent for a third person, though he may in the mean time have debited the agent with it, he may afterwards recover the amount from the principal, subject however to this qualification—that the state of the accounts between the principal and agent is not altered to the prejudice of the principal.”
But to bring the principal within this qualification it must clearly appear that he would be damnified, as where ho has settled with the agent upon the warrantable assumption that he was answerable to him (Wyatt v. The Marquis of Hertford, 3 East R., 147 ; Cheever v. Smith, 15 John. R., 276; Rathbone v. Tucker, 15 Wend., 498); and in Nelson v. Powell (3 Doug. 410), the principal was held responsible for a balance due upon a sale of goods made to the agent in his own name, even though he had remitted to the agent the money to pay for them.
In the present case the flour went to the defendant's use, and he could not be damnified unless he had given out the money to pay for it—a point upon which the testimony was not sufficiently clear to warrant our disturbing the finding of the justice.
The judgment should be affirmed.