The defendant is a partnership, and is engaged as a brokerage firm upon the Board of Trade in Chicago. It maintained a local office at Shenandoah, Iowa. The plaintiff was one of its customers, and had on deposit with it $240 to protect his deals. On the morning of July 8, 1910, plaintiff ordered the purchase of one thousand bushels of September wheat at a stated price. This order was immediately executed. Later in the day, he ordered the purchase of another thousand bushels of September wheat. In the transmission of this second order from the Shenandoah office to the Chicago office, a mistake was made, and as the result of such mistake the defendant purchased for the plaintiff ten thousand bushels of September wheat, and telegraphic confirmation of the purchase of such amount was. delivered to the plaintiff on the same day. The contents of this telegraphic confirmation were taken for granted by the plaintiff, who put the same in his pocket without reading, and did not discover the mistake until the next day. Neither did the defendant nor its agent discover that any mistake had been .made until the next day. It is the contention of the plaintiff that when he discovered the. mistake on the next day he ratified the purchase. On the other hand, it is the contention of the defendant that there was no ratification,
i Principal and cation: evl^" dence. I. Inasmuch as the defendant had actually made a purchase on behalf of the plaintiff of ten thousand bushels and reported the same to him accordingly, it rested with plaintiff in .the first instance to ratify or to repudiate. Meehem on Agency, section 154. jf ke £ajje¿ repudiate promptly, he would be deemed to have ratified, and the contract would become binding upon him. Clews v. Jamieson, 182 U. S. 461 (21 Sup. Ct. 845, 45 L. Ed. 1182), 31 Cyc. 1285. In the Clews case, supra, the rule is stated as follows:
A principal can" adopt and ratify the unauthorized act of his agent, who in fact is assuming to act in his behalf, although not disclosing his agency to others; and when it is so ratified it is as if the principal had given an original authority to that, effect, and the ratification relates back to the time of the' act which -is ratified. He must
It is not claimed by defendant that there was any actual repudiation by plaintiff. T'he claim of the defendant is that, immediately upon discovering the error, it ■corrected the same of its own motion. If this correction had been made before plaintiff had been notified of the puchase, a different question would be presented. If the -correction when made had been reported to the plaintiff, and he had acquiesced therein, a different question would be presented. It does not appear from this record that there was any notification to the plaintiff of a correction of the mistake before the order to sell his “holdings” was received and executed. The fact that the mistake was already profitable when first discovered by both parties is a circumstance in favor of the theory of ratification by plaintiff, and a jury would be warranted in drawing ■some inference therefrom. We think there was sufficient evidence to sustain a finding of ratification' by the jury. The defendant’s motion for a directed verdict was therefore properly overruled.
■2. Change of timYEsuESenoy' II. The action was brought in the superior court ■of Shenandoah. The defendant filed a motion for a change of venue under the provisions of section 261. The motion was overruled, and complaint is made of such ruling. The defendant is in no position to complain of this ruling. The record shows it to be a partnership firm. It was sued in that capacity alone. None of its members were included as defendants.
3. Payment estoppel. III. It was also pleaded by the defendant that on July 1,6, 1910, it closed its account with the plaintiff and paid to him the sum of $322.50 as being the amount then standing to his credit. It is urged in argument that this amounted to a settlement, and that plaintiff is estopped thereby from now claiming more. It is sufficient to say that the answer did not in ■terms plead a settlement nor an estoppel. Nor does it ■appear that the $322.50 thus paid involved any item of dispute. Such amount was concededly due the plaintiff, regardless of the result of th'e present dispute. No conditions appear to have been attached to its payment or to its acceptance. The plaintiff was then claiming the profits for which this suit was later brought. The defendant did not demand that he relinquish such claim as’ a condition to the payment of the amount concededly due him. Nor is there anything in the record from which the jury -could find that such payment was intended as a settlement of this controversy. Other minor points are stated by ■appellant’s counsel without elaboration. None of them furnish ground of complaint to appellant.
The judgment helow must- therefore be affirmed.