I. The appellee states the principal questions to be considered as follo.ws: “Upon suit being brought, the account of the appellants was admitted, and the amount due under the contract was made the subject of a counterclaim, and so the case was tried and went to the jury. The two principal questains raised upon the trial were: First, did Bryner make the contract as alleged in the counterclaim? second, if he did, had he actual or apparent right to do so?”
*693The jury must have found that Bryner did make the contract, and the testimony warrants the conclusion. It must have also found that Bryner “had the actual or apparent right to do so.” With regard to the “apparent right” to make such a contract, the court gave the following instruction: “Ninth. In the absence of all knowledge or notice of what powers were expressly conferred by the plaintiffs upon Bryner, the firm of Charles Stuart & Son would have the right to deal with him with reference to the scope of the apparent authority with which he was invested and, held out to said firm by the plaintiffs. In dealing with Bryner, when he was claiming to act as agent of the plaintiffs, the firm of Charles Stuart & Son was bound, at its peril, to see that he had authority to bind the plaintiffs in that transaction, or that he was acting within the scope of his apparent authority; and in this connection the question is not what authority the plaintiffs intended to give Bryner, but what authority was the firm of Charles Stuart & Son justified, in dealing with him, in believing had been given. The plaintiffs would not be bound by any act not expressly authorized or necessary to cany out the powers expressly conferred, or to accomplish the purpose of the agency, unless they, by their acts and conduct, had apparently clothed him with other or greater powers, — that is, unless they had given him a scope of apparent authority beyond the powers expressly conferred, — and then the plaintiffs would only be bound in case the firm of- Charles Stuart & Son did not know of his real authority, and were justified in believing he had the authority claimed, by the acts and conduct of the plaintiffs themselves;. and the apparent authority herein required is not the authority assumed or claimed by Bryner without the knowledge or consent of the plaintiffs, but it is the authority apparently conferred upon him by the acts, declarations, and conduct of the plaintiffs themselves, or by the acts and conduct *694of Bryner, which were known to and ratified by the plaintiffs.”
It is urged that there is error in giving the instruction, because there is no evidence to justify it. The instruction is set out because it indicates the facts essential to an “apparent authority,” which are important in discussing the question of evidence on the point. We think the instruction should not have been given. After a careful review of the recoi’d, we see no testimony tending to show an apparent authority, unless some statements are disconnected and given a meaning manifestly not intended. Bryner was not a general agent. He was a special agent, with authority to solicit shipments of grain to the plaintiffs for sale on commission. He possessed all the authority embraced within the ordinary and usual scope of such an employment. No word of testimony, indicates that Charles Stuart & Son believed, or had reason to believe, that Bryner possessed any greater authority. We must keep in view the business of the plaintiffs and Charles Stuart & Son. The business of the plaintiff firm was to receive and sell grain for a commission. Stuart & Son were shippers of grain to be sold on commission. The commission was the regular one fixed by the trade, and known to the parties. From 1885 to 1888 this course of business was pursued without variation, during which time Bry-ner was the agent securing the business of Charles Stuart & Son, and he in no way appeared to possess any different authority. As to the two cent rebate from 1885 to April 1, 1887, it does not appear to have been a matter of contract or obligation on the part of the plaintiffs, but the result of a “cut in rates” by the railway company, which went to the benefit of Stuart & Son, and ceased when the rebate was discontinued. In this connection it should be said that, after the interstate commerce act was in force, the rate per cent, to Peoria was made two cents less by the railway company, *695so that the profits to Stuart & Son were the same as when the rebate was paid. It is not to be disputed but that, if the contract to pay this two cents per hundred pounds is to be sustained, the result is that Bryner has made a contract by which Stuart & Son shipped grain to the plaintiffs to be sold, and, after deducting the freight, the balance of the market price, with an additional amount to be paid by the plaintiffs, was to be returned to Stuart & Son; for the commissions at all times were less than two cents per hundred pounds.
At this point we should inquire what facts indicated to Stuart & Son that Bryner had such an “apparent authority.” Its exercise was in direct conflict with his entire course of procedure and the apparent authority which before that time Stuart & Son had reason to suppose he possessed. The appellee makes an attempt in argument to meet the query, but it is unsatisfactory. It is urged that, after the plaintiffs were informed that Stuart & Son were about to change their shipmeuts to others, they sent Bryner “for the purpose of inducing them to continue their relations with the plaintiffs;” and it is said, “By making this arrangement Bryner succeeded in accomplishing the very object for which he was sent into the state.” The argument indicates the appellee’s difficulty, for it assumes more than the record warrants, and without which assumption there is no force in the position. It is not to be inferred, in any way, from the record, that the plaintiffs desired a continuance of the relations, except on the basis of their being commission men, to sell for a commission, or that they sent Bryner to make a contract that would defeat the only known object for their continuing the relation. If we concede that, by the plaintiffs sending Bryner to solicit a continuance of the business, and that such act clothed him with apparent authority to make any contract that would preserve the former relation of shippers and commission merchants, as by changing the *696rates of commissions or the method of doing the business, we are still without the apparent authority to do what was done in this ease; for it was not in the usual and ordinary scope of such an agency, but wholly without and subversive of it. It was a contract to pay for the privilege of doing the work for nothing, and assuming the responsibility connected therewith. If we should apply a rule for general agents, as given by Mr. Mechem in his work on Agency, section 285, that “it may not unreasonably be presumed, where nothing is indicated to the contrary, that such an agent possesses those powers which are commensurate with his undertaking, and which are usually and properly exercised by other similar agents under like circumstances,” we have not enough to clothe Bryner with the apparent authority claimed for him; for we do not think an instance is to be found where facts so prominent, and so far exceeding the usual and ordinary powers of an agency, have been construed as indicating apparent authority.
It is said, and it is likely true, that three hundred dollars of the two cents per hundred pound claim was paid after the contract was made. We have some doubt whether evidence of this payment is in the record, but, if it is, it is rather against than for the defendant ; for it appears that in the letter of Bryner transmitting it he told Stuart & Son “not to let Elder & McKinney know anything about the three hundred dollars;” and there is nothing to indicate that they paid it, or knew of the payment. In the instruction the rule of law is stated that “the plaintiffs would not be bound by any act not expressly authorized or necessai’y to carry out the powers expressly conferred, or to accomplish the purpose of the agency, unless they by their acts and conduct had apparently clothed him with other or greater powers; that is, unless they had given him a scope of apparent authority beyond the powers expressly *697conferred.” There is no evidence from which such apparent authority could he found. Such a contract was unusual, unreasonable, and not businesslike, and would indicate the exercise of an undue, rather than .apparent, authority by an agent.
We are cited to authorities, and the rule is not to be doubted, that the question of the extent of authority by an agent, where the proof is by parol, is for’ the jury, and “it is error for the court to decide the point as a matter of law.” But such is not this case. Here there is no evidence from which the court or the jury Qould find the fact, and the error is in permitting the jury to attempt it. Without evidence, the question was pot involved in the trial. It is quite evident that the term “apparent authority” was intended by the court us something different from “real authority,” as both terms are used in the instruction. By apparent authority the court meant, not what was granted, but other authority that Stuart & Son might assume as a result of the “acts and conduct” of the plaintiffs. The mere .granting of authority is not an act or conduct from which other authority, not by law inferred because within the usual and ordinary scope of employment, can be assumed. There is no greater proof in this case, and, as we have said, the giving of the instruction was error. The question of apparent authority is also included in the tenth, eleventh, and twelfth instructions, but we need not consider it further.
The assignments of error argued are quite numerous, and in some of them we might hold the rulings erroneous; but they seem to be influenced by the views of the court as to this apparent authority of the agent, and we think our discussion of that question will be sufficient to avoid other errors, if any, on another trial. The judgment is reversed..