Wax v. Roydhouse Arey Co.

Opinion by

Kephart, J.,

The only question involved in this appeal is the sufficiency of the evidence to establish an agency giving authority to one of the employees connected with the defendant to sell certain iron beams. The defendant was engaged in taking down an old building. This employee was on the ground looking after the work. The plaintiff purchased from him iron and junk, “including beams, stairways, and miscellaneous scrap, such as pipes, wiring, etc.”

It is the defendant’s contention that the employee, H. M. Roydhouse, who was a son of the president of the defendant company, was not authorized to sell the iron beams. From the evidence it is clear that he was authorized to sell scrap iron and lumber connected with the building. He sold some of this material to others than the plaintiffs in the case. When the representative of the plaintiffs called to ascertain if he could purchase the lumber, the defendant’s foreman introduced him to *144H. M. Roydhouse as being the one in authority to sell the iron which the plaintiffs desired to buy. Shortly after the plaintiffs’ purchase, Abraham Wax, one of the plaintiffs’ firm, was in conversation with the president of the defendant company and the son who sold the iron, when the sale, as called for in the receipt, was discussed. The president told the representative of the plaintiffs to move it away as rapidly as possible, and he was at the work three or four times a day and saw the plaintiffs moving a part of the scrap iron away. The iron had been paid for and no effort was made to return the purchase money until some time after the contract had been made. A witness for the defendant testifies that outside of the iron beams the scrap was practically worthless. The plaintiffs show that it cost them more than this scrap was worth to get it out and haul it away. After the plaintiffs had been ordered not to move the beams, Mr. Wax went to the defendant’s office and interviewed the president, when the conversation as related by Mr. Wax gives the real cause for this refusal. Mr. Roydhouse, the president, said: “I just got a building contract to erect a building, and I have use for those beams. ... I will give you your money back on the junk you hauled out from there. I think that will cover your expenses and some profit.” Mr. Wax informed him that the only things they were looking for, were the beams and that was his reason for buying the scrap; to which Mr. Roydhouse replied: “I must have them and you can’t have them. You can do whatever you please.” It is clear from the record that there was sufficient evidence in the case to submit the question of agency to the jury, which the learned trial judge did in a charge which is free from error. While the defendant denied the authority of young Roydhouse to sell, they accepted a part of his contract which caused the plaintiffs more expense than the money they could receive from its sale. Where one adopts a contract entered into without his authority, he must adopt it altogether. He cannot ratify *145the beneficial part and reject the remainder:” Benjamin v. Holgate, 51 Pa. Superior Ct. 104. The claim of the defendant that the beams were not its property and therefore the young man could not sell them, would not help the defendant. Persons very often contract to sell things they do not own, with the hope of being able to deliver them when the time comes. The plaintiffs were led to believe the iron was owned by the defendant. The apparent scope of the authority of the young man in charge of the work, with his act in selling lumber and scrap to others, would be evidence of holding out as an agent to justify persons dealing with him in assuming that he had authority to sell all of the scrap iron in question.

The assignment of error is overruled and judgment affirmed at the cost of the appellant.