Weil Bros. v. Hanks
Weil Bros. v. Hanks
Opinion of the Court
Plaintiffs bought 100 bales of cotton from J. H. Coughlin, and sue J. H. Coughlin and J. F: Hanks jointly for failing and refusing to deliver the cotton as contracted for. The complaint avers that plaintiffs were ready, willing, and able to' receive and pay for the cotton, but does not aver any offer to do so.
The evidence shows that the cotton in question was bought by plaintiffs’ local buyer at Talladega from Coughlin alone. But the contention is that Coughlin and Hanks were partners in the business of buying and selling cotton, or, if not partners inter sese, yet their visible association, their community of interest in cotton bought by them at various times, and their mode of doing business, constituted such a holding out by Hanks as a partner of Coughlin’s, known to and re *40 lied upon by plaintiffs’ agent in this transaction, as to render Hanks liable to plaintiffs, on the principle of estoppel, as if he were in fact a partner. Knard v. Hill, 102 Ala. 570, 15 South. 345; Marble v. Lypes, 82 Ala. 322, 2 South. 701; Ala., etc., Co. v. Reynolds, 85 Ala. 19, 4 South. 639; Meharg Co. v. Davis, 189 Ala. 483, 66 South. 576.
Under the settled rules of law defining the elements necessary to constitute a partnership, the chief essential being a sharing of the profit and loss accruing from the joint enterprise, there was clearly no partnership inter sese.
But these facts; explicable in many other natural and reasonable ways, cannot convict Hanks of holding himself out as á partner responsible for Coughlin’s transactions. The most that can be fairly said is that they show some business relationship between them, and some pecuniary interest in Hanks in the cotton handled by Coughlin, which is very far short of authorizing the assumption that they were partners.
It does not appear that either- of them ever assumed or pretended to be acting for a firm, or other than for himself as an individual. Where merely circumstantial conduct, short of assertion, express or implied, is relied upon to show a “holding out,” it is insufficient, unless it is fairly inconsistent with any other reasonable hypothesis than the existence of a partnership. Otherwise there is not in any legal sense a “holding out.” Merely equivocal conduct which may or may not result from the partnership relation, and which consists equally with some nonpartnership relation, cannot fasten upon one person liability for tire individual act of another. While the circumstances here relied on might support a speculation that Coughlin and Hanks might be partners, we hold that, as matter of law, they cannot support any rational inference thereof. On the contrary, before assuming and relying upon the existence of a partnership in such a case, it is the clear legal duty of a third person to make inquiry of the party upon whose credit he relies and whom he expects to charge with liability. Morgan v. Farrell, 58 Conn. 413, 20 Atl. 614, 18 Am. St. Rep. 282, 288.
For these reasons, we think the trial court properly instructed for the defendant Hanks.
But here we hold that, resolving all material conflicts in the evidence in plaintiffs’ favor, and according the most favorable inferences permissible, there is nothing tending to show such a holding out.
Many questions excluded when asked were in fact answered at other times. Many of the other questions to the witness Bullard were objectionable, but, if these and all the other rulings on the evidence had been favorable to plaintiffs, it would not have altered the situation as we view it.
Let the judgment be affirmed.
Affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- WEIL BROS. v. HANKS Et Al.
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- Published