This was an action of replevin for 250 head of cattle by the defendant in error against the plaintiffs in error. On *485the first trial there was a verdict and judgment in favor of the defendants in the district court. This judgment was reversed by this court. (Milwaukee & Wyoming Investment Co. v. Johnston, 35 Neb., 554.) The case has been retried, resulting in a verdict and judgment for the plaintiffs/,-and the defendants now prosecute error. The evidence is substantially the same as on the first trial) and the facts having been stated somewhat in detail in the former opinion, we refer to that and will not restate them, except that, in view of one argument now made, it should perhaps be stated that the business of the corporation, as set forth in its charter, is “buying, selling, raising, shipping, exchanging, and dealing in all kinds of cattle, horses, and other live stock, in the territory of Wyoming,” etc., and that the duties of the manager, as provided by the by-laws, and as briefly referred to in the former opinion, are prescribed as follows: “ The manager and assistant manager shall reside and keep their office in the territory of Wyoming and shall have the charge and management, subject to the orders of the directors, of all the affairs and property of the company in said territory.”
On the former hearing the case was decided solely on the effect of the evidence as to a custom in Wyoming whereby the manager of a cattle ranch, it was claimed, had power to sell cattle therefrom, and the court in the former opinion laid down certain rules for the determination of that question alone; that is, as to what was necessary in order to establish a custom vesting- in the manager authority to so dispose of cattle. As now presented an entirely different question arises. On the trial in the district court a special verdict was taken whereby, under instructions conformable to the former opinion, the jury found that no such custom prevailed. The jury also found that prior to the sale of the cattle in question Adams had not, with the plaintiff’s knowledge, performed any similar acts, and under a peremptory instruction there was a -finding *486that Adams possessed no actual authority to make the sale. There were other findings not material to the questions which we shall consider. The former opinion strongly implied a holding that no actual authority existed for the i-ale made by Adams, and we shall not here reconsider that question. The judgment in favor of the plaintiff^ was evidently entered on the theory that, in the absence of such actual authority, or apparent, conferred either by a custom of business or by the exercise of prior similar acts, the plaintiffs could not be bound by Adams’ acts. One instruction given by the court clearly shows that the judgment proceeded on this theory. This instruction was as follows:
“An act is within the apparent authority of thd agent when it is'of like character as that of prior acts performed by him for the same principal, and which such principal, knowing the same, sanctioned or ratified. The act of an agent within his apparent but not within his real authority will bind his principal only in case the person dealing with such agent knew of such prior acts and dealt with the agent in reliance thereon; and in this case you are instructed that unless you find from a preponderance of the evidence that Thomas R. Adams had prior to the sale of these cattle performed acts of a similar character, and that the plaintiff, after knowledge or notice thereof, sanctioned or ratified such prior similar acts, then you will not be justified in finding that Adams possessed the apparent authority to sell the cattle in question. The defendants cannot base any rights in this action upon the ground that they dealt with Thomas R. Adams as having the apparent authority to sell fhe cattle unless it appears from the evidence that they, or one of them, knew of facts giving such apparent authority to Adams, and acted upon such appearances in the transaction of purchasing the cattle in question.
“The mere fact that the plaintiff had entrusted the care, management, and possession of these cattle to Thomas R. Adams, gave him no authority to sell them. Although *487authority on the part of an agent may in proper cases be implied from the words and conduct of the parties, or from the circumstances of the case, yet the extent of the authority so implied cannot exceed the necessary and legitimate •effect of the facts from which it is inferred, but must be limited to the performance of like acts under like circumstances. The authority, if implied at all, can only be implied from facts.”
In the light of all the instructions it was clearly the view of the court th&t, it having disposed of the question of actual authority, and the jury having found that no such general custom existed as would, under the former opinion of the court, confer authority upon the agent, no apparent authority could exist unless by the exercise by the agent of such authority in the past, supplemented by knowledge of those acts on the part of the company, and by similar knowledge on the part of defendants, relied on by them in making the purchase. It is familiar law that a principal is bound by the acts of his agent, not only when performed within the scope of his actual or implied authority, but when within the scope of apparent authority conferred upon him by the principal. There have been many cases distinguishing in this respect between a general agent and a special agent; and perhaps this distinction is not without value, although in most cases it simply throws back one step the process of investigation. Indeed, with regard to acts of corporations it has often been said that the only general agents are its directors acting in their corporate capacity. Strict application of the distinction would, therefore, constitute all acts •of corporations not performed under a resolution of the board of directors the acts of special agents, and would require all persons dealing with corporations, except in pursuance of such resolutions, to proceed at their peril. This at one stage of the law might have been a proper doctrine, but the courts must take notice of the fact that the province of corporations is now vastly enlarged; that corporations *488now exist, not only for the transaction of public or ecclesiastical affairs, but for the purpose of carrying on ordinary business transactions. We have now private corporations, not only operating railroads and other institutions having (^Mast-public functions, but also corporations conducting banks, manufacturing establishments, live stock raising, as in the present instance, and even retail shops. The domain of individual enterprise has, in other words, been invaded by corporations, and in the conduct of such enterprises we can see no reason and no principle of law requiring the application of rules to such corporations different from those applying to individuals under similar circumstances, except where the acts relate to the operations of the corporation in its capacity as such. What we mean to express by this is that in transactions having no relation to the corporation in its corporate capacity, but solely in regard to the conduct of its business affairs, the general principles applicable to individuals should apply.
It is .argued that one dealing with a corporation is, as a matter of law, bound to take notice of its charter and of its by-laws; that one cannot, therefore, claim any right under the act of an agent of a corporation whose authority by its by-laws is so restricted as to invalidate such an act; that the converse of this must be true, and that, therefore, one dealing with an agent of a corporation, empowered by its by-laws to perform a particular act, may protect himself under- such by-law, although he had no actual notice thereof and although by specific instructions the ageut had been forbidden to perform such act. Following out this line of argument/1 it is contended that the by-law providing for a manager conveyed upon him authority to sell cattle, and that such authority could not, as against a stranger, be restricted by private instructions. To this, however, we cannot assent, although it has received some support from the courts. Certain cases in the New York supreme court lend credit thereto, but they are rudely disturbed by the state*489ment of the court of appeals (Raihbun v. Snow, 123 N. Y., 343), that “ by-laws of business corporations are, as to third persons, private regulations, binding as between the corporation and its members or third persons having knowledge of them, but of no force as limitations per se as to third persons of an authority which, except for the bylaws, would be construed as within the apparent scope of the agency.” An opinion of the supreme court of Virginia (Bocock’s Executor v. Alleghany Coal & Iron Co., 82 Va., 913) also is in support of the contention, but its force as authority is destroyed by the fact that it is based on a flagrant misquotation of a decision of the same court in Bockover v. Life Association, 77 Va., 85, the court in that case having correctly quoted from Relfe v. Rundle, 13 Otto, [U. S.], 222. The earlier Virginia case and the case in the supreme court of the United States relate to an entirely different question. Both courts laid down an entirely different doctrine, and the opinion in the later Virginia case disregards the point in controversy in the cases cited, and very materially misquotes the language of the court. The better doctrine is that of the New York court, of appeals in Rathbun v. Snow, already quoted, when restricted to the business operations of the corporation, and not applied to the performance of corporate acts, such as the issuance of bonds or like acts where the corporate powers are themselves involved, as distinguished from the particular exercise of powers clearly possessed by the corporation, by subordinate agents thereof.
The sale of these cattle was clearly within the power of the corporation, the only question was the apparent authority of this particular agent of the corporation to make the sale, and we may thus divest ourselves in the present inquiry of all investigation as to corporate functions, and consider whether or not there was error in the judgment independent of the fact that the plaintiff is a corporation. A review of the authorities bearing on the question would
*490be almost endless, and their confusion is such that it would hardly be profitable. We conceive that the rule whereby a principal is bound by the acts of his agent beyond his actual authority, but withintits apparent scope, is founded in the first place on the maxim that where one of two innocent persons must suffer, it should be that one who misled the other into the contract (Story, Agency, sec. 443), and this doctrine is founded on a broad principle of equitable estoppel or estoppel in pais. We conceive that a proper statement of it, with reference to such a case as we have before us, is as follows: That where a principal has by Iris voluntary act placed an agent in such a situation that a person of ordinary prudeuce, conversant with business usages and the nature of the particular business, is justified in presuming that such agent has authority to perform on behalf of his principal a particular act, such particular act having been performed, the principal is estopped, as against such innocent third person, from denying the agent’s authority to perform it. We do not think that in order to bring a case within this principle it is in all cases necessary to show that by general custom, as defined in the former opinion of the court, such agents have such authority; nor do we think that it is necessary in all cases to show that the same agent had previously performed similar acts; that such acts were known to the principal; that the third person also knew of them, and relied on them in the transaction, or even that similar agents had in the past performed such acts. A number of elements may influence the solution of the question. In this case the corporation was located in Milwaukee, in the state of Wisconsin. It was formed for the purpose of doing business in Wyoming, and most of its business was there conducted. The very fact that the corporation and its general officers held their office at a remote point was an element for consideration. (Rathbun v. Snow, supra.) One might be justified in dealing with a person in apparent management of the business in Wyoming, where the *491office of the corporation was in a distant state, where he would not be so justified if he found the general offices and general officers of the corporation at or near the place where the business was conducted. Furthermore, the general nature of the business and its requirements was an element for consideration. (Montgomery Furniture Co. v. Hardaway, 16 So. Rep. [Ala.], 29.) It might-well be that one would be justified in buying ripe fruit from one found in charge of orchards where he might not be justified in dealing with suck a person in goods not perishable in their nature. Business usage might have its influence, although not so general and uniform as by implying notice to the principal to also imply that such custom was in view when the agent was appointed. We mention these instances merely by way of illustration, and we hold that the apparent authority of the agent, beyond his actual authority, does not depend solely upon custom or solely on the performance of previous similar acts, whether known or unknown to a person dealing with him, but that, subject to the general rule we have above stated, and to general legal principles, the question is one of fact to be determined by the jury under all the circumstances of the transaction and the business, as disclosed by the evidence.
It follows that the special findings referred to were insufficient whereon to found the judgment, and that the instruction quoted was erroneous.
Reversed and remanded.