In the 1st paragraph of the complaint it is alleged: “ At the time of the sale thereof to defendant hereinafter alleged, plaintiff, individually and as Trustee for F. S. Hunting, W. E. Mossman, L. P. Drayer, F. X. Diebold, H. F. Bachman & Company and Harry E. Kohn, was the owner of twelve (12) Baker High Duty Drill Presses known as Maker’s No. 310.” In the 3d
The defendant first contends that the complaint does not allege a sale by plaintiff to the defendant and a purchase by the defendant from the plaintiff of the presses in question. The allegation of the 3d paragraph set forth is that the plaintiff sold and the defendant purchased said twelve presses. It would seem as though by fair intendment the court would construe this allegation alone as sufficient to allege a purchase by the defendant of the plaintiff, but such construction is made clear beyond cavil in the 1st paragraph of the complaint, which recites that at the time of the sale thereof to the defendant the plaintiff was the owner of said presses. If at the time of the sale to defendant plaintiff was the owner of the presses, the sale to defendant could only have been made by the plaintiff. There are other allegations in the complaint of a delivery of part of the presses by the plaintiff to the defendant and of performance by the plaintiff of all the conditions of said agreement on his part and of the amount owing by the defendant to the plaintiff upon said sale, which serve if necessary to strengthen the inference otherwise irresistible that the plaintiff meant to allege a sale by himself to the defendant and a purchase by the defendant from himself.
The plaintiff showed upon the trial an agreement of sale made between one Pitt and one G-ath representing the defendant, under which agreement the five presses were to be
Plaintiff then sought to show that Pitt was the foreman of the Santo Manufacturing Company which had possession of these presses, and that the possession of the Santo Manufacturing Company was under the plaintiff and that the Santo Manufacturing Company and Pitt as the manager thereof were his agents in making the sale of said presses to the defendant. The rule was recognized by the trial court that a sale by an agent of an undisclosed principal gave to the principal authority to sue, although the agent might sell the property as his own, but it appeared that after Pitt had made the original contract with the defendant’s representative the defendant had written a letter to the Santo Manufacturing Company purporting to state the terms of the contract, and the trial court was of the opinion that this fact established Pitt’s agency as the agent of the Santo Manufacturing Company, and the plaintiff was not allowed to show that Pitt was acting as his agent in the sale of these presses. In this we think the trial court was in error. Pitt might well have been the general manager in the Santo Manufacturing Company, and if the Santo Manufacturing Company' held these presses belonging to the plaintiff and had authority to sell them, the act of Pitt as its general manager would be in the execution of the agency of the Santo Manufacturing Company, to sell these presses for the plaintiff. The plaintiff should have been allowed, therefore, to show his ownership of the presses and the authority of Pitt to sell them for him, and for the refusal of the trial court to permit such proof this judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted.
A greater difficulty lies in the defendant’s contention that the contract as originally made providing for delivery on the first of May was confirmed by correspondence which made it a
The judgment should, therefore, be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to appellant to abide the event.
Clarke, P. J., Scott, Page and Davis, JJ., concurred.
Judgment reversed, new trial ordered, costs to appellant to abide event.