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OCR Page 1 of 2NATIONAL
ARCHIVES AND
RECORDS
SERVICE"
FINAL EXAMINATION IN AGENCY
KANSAS CITY SCHOOL OF LAW
May 23, 1924.
Hon. A. L. Berger
Mr. Homer A. Cope
Mr. Stanley Bassett
I
R. makes a written contract with L authorizing him to sell some real
estate, L being unable to procure a purchaser and desiring the real
estate as a factory site for a company of his own, buys the real es-
tate, but has the contract made in the name of a straw man so that R
does not know that his agent L is buying the property. The price given
for the property is reasonable and is the amount for which R agreed to
sell, but upon finding out that his agent is the real purchaser, R re-
fuses to go ahead with the contract. Can he be made to do so? State
reasons briefly.
II
Jones, at the request of a democratic campaign committee, loans his
car to them for purpose of doing election work. His daughter agreed
to drive the car. While she was taking some voters to the polls she
runs into and injures a pedestrian. The pedestrian sues Jones, the
father, Is there liability?
III
P owned a coal business which he allowed his brother A to carry on
in A's name. A made a bargain with T, a tailor, that T should make
a suit of clothes for A and take his pay in coal. A had the coal
delivered to T and received the clothes. A died soon after, and
P, finding a charge on the books against T for the coal, sued T for
the price.
pleaded set-off and payment by the price of the clothes.
T acted in good faith, supposing A to be the owner. Judgment?
IV
R & Company, an insurance Company operating in the United States,
contracts with Bates & Company, an insurance Agency, in Kansas City,
Missouri, to handle their business as General Agent in the State of
Missouri. Prior to the signing of the contract between the Insur-
ance Company and Bates & Company, Bates of Bates & Company, Manager,
had solicited C, a rich farmer, with the view of writing a policy
for $50,000.00 to cover C's life. C had been informed that the
policy would be written in another Company and the manager of Bates
& Company was informed by a brother of C that C had hereditary
tuberculosis. After the Insurance Company and Bates & Company had
made their contract with each other, a policy with R & Company was
written on C's life by Bates & Company. No information as to the
hereditary disease was communicated to the Insurance Company by
Bates & Company. C dies of tuberculosis within six months after
the policy is written. May his legal representative collect from
the Insurance Company? May the Insurance Company recover from
Bates & Company?
V
A told B that he was C's agent, and desired to sell for C, one thous-
and bushels of wheat, for delivery at the expiration of thirty days,
for $1.00 per bushel, cash. B thereupon entered into a written
contract with A as C's agent for the purchase of the one thousand
bushels .of wheat upon the terms mentioned. At the place agreed upon
for delivery, wheat was worth upon the market $1.50 per bushel. C
refused to deliver the wheat to B. Thereupon B sued C for damages
in the sum of $500.00. Upon the trial he showed that at the time
and place of delivery agreed upon, C had refused and failed to make
the delivery. He also showed the statements made by A at the time
the sale was made and the written contract. He offered no further
evidence. Upon such showing was he entitled to recover? Give your
reasons,
Relations
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