Keim & McMillan Hardware Co. v. Williams
Keim & McMillan Hardware Co. v. Williams
Opinion of the Court
This was an action on an open account instituted by the appellant corporation against the defendants as members of a partnership to recover
The amended petition is as follows: (Caption omitted.)
“Now comes the plaintiff and states that it is and was at all the times hereinafter mentioned, a corporation, organized and doing business under the laws of the State of Missouri and liable to sue and be sued as such in,, the courts of this state.
“That the defendants, L. Williams and R. K. Hearne were on the 2d day of February, 1902, and up to the 5th day of August, 1905, engaged in the retail merchants business at Boston, Barton county, Missouri, as a partnership, and between said dates bought goods of the plaintiff and divers other persons and had them shipped to their store at Boston, aforesaid, where they received them into their stock of merchandise. That on or about said date, August 5, 1905, there was taken into the firm the two sons of L. Williams and the firm was known afterwards as Williams Sons & Company. And the defendant Hearne never gave any notice of his retirement from the firm and the same continued to ruil as the firm of Williams Sons & Company as far as this plaintiff is informed, up to and including January 30, 1908, when the defendants cea,sed to purchase goods from this plaintiff. Said Hearne remaining in said partnership, so far as plaintiff is informed and believes. And for its cause of action plaintiff states that on or about the 2d day of February, 1902, at the special instance and request of defendants, plaintiff sold aod delivered to de*721 fendant certain goods and merchandise of the value and for the price of $1821.32, the items of which, as well as the dates when the various articles were sold, and the prices charged therefor respectively, appear from the bill of items hereto annexed and mark exhibit A.
“Plaintiff says that the prices charged for said goods are, and were at the time when said goods were sold and delivered, reasonable and proper, and defendants promised and agreed to pay the same, but,'though often thereto requested, they have paid a part thereof, to-wit, $1531.48, which leaves a balance of $289.84 which they have failed and refused, and still fail and refuse to pay the said balance, and every part thereof.
“Plaintiff says that it made demand of payment of said account and balance of $289.84 of and from the defendants on the 1st day of February, 1908.
“Wherefore, plaintiff prays judgment against all the defendants for the sum of two hundred and eighty-nine and 84-100 dollars, with interest at the rate of six per cent per annum from the 2d day of February, 1908, and for cost of suit.” (Signature and exhibit A omitted.)
The evidence offered by the. appellant tended to show that on the 28th day of February, 1902, it opened an account upon its books with a partnership known as Williams & Hearne at Boston, Missouri, and from that date until June 19, 1905, kept an open account in their name for goods furnished them from time to time during such period and rendered Williams & Hearne monthly itemized statements of the goods so furnished. The goods were ordered, shipments made, and bills settled under the name of Williams & Hearne until the firm name was changed, in August, 1905,' to Williams Sons & Company, after which time the plaintiff transacted business with and sold goods to the firm of Williams Sons & Company. The old firm of Williams & Hearne was dissolved, and two sons of Williams, together with Williams, organized a new partnership and subsequently
Defendant Hearne filed with his separate answer the following affidavit: (Caption, signature, etc., omitted.)
“R. K. Hearne, one of the above named defendants, first being duly sworn, on his oath says that he was not at any of the times, mentioned in plaintiff’s amended petition in the above entitled cause a member of any firm or partnership doing or transacting business under .the firm name, and style of Williams Sons & Com- ■ pany, and that he is not a partner and never was a partner with any of the other defendants mentioned in said petition, in the retail merchants business, or any other business at Boston, Missouri, or anywhere else, and says that no partnership ever existed between this defendant and the other defendants or any of them in any manner whatever, as alleged in said petition, or otherwise.”
At the trial, there was evidence offered that defendant Hearne furnished money to carry on the bus-' iness and held himself out as a member of the firm of Williams & Hearne, the principal contention of the parties being as to whether this money was a loan to
The serious difficulty which confronts the appellant, and which <dt must overcome before it can recover in this case, is that the theory of its cause of action' stated in the amended petition shows no right of recovery whatever against R. K. Hearne,who is the responsible defendant and the only one of the defendants who is contesting the appellant’s right to a judgment. It will be SQen that the special recitals of the petition as to the particular grounds of defendant H'earne’s legal liability are stated as follows:
“That the defendants, L. Williams and R. K. Hearne, were on the 2d day of February, 1902, and up to the 5th day of August, 1905, engaged in the retail merchants business' at Boston, Barton county, Missouri, as a partnership, and between said dates bought goods of the plaintiff and divers other persons and had them shipped to their store at Boston, aforesaid, where they received them into their stock of merchandise. That on or about said date, August 5, 1905, there was taken into the firm the two sons of L. Williams and the firm was known afterwards as Williams Sons & Company. And the defendant Hearne never gave any notice of his retirement from the firm and the same continued to run as the firm of Williams Sons .& Company as far as this plaintiff is informed, up to and including January 30, 1908, when the defendants ceased to purchase goods from this plaintiff. Said Hearne remaining in said partnership, so far as plaintiff is informed and believes.”
Briefly summarized, the liability of the defendant Hearne as above stated by plaintiff is that from February 2, 1902, to August 5, 1905, he was a member of the firm known as and doing business under the name
Appellant’s evidence as to Hearne being a member of the firm of Williams Sons & Company, to which appellant sold the goods in question, is confined to the testimony of its traveling salesman who testified that he called at their place of business after the firm name had been changed from Williams &, Hearne to Williams Sons & Company and had a conversation with L. Williams, in which Williams stated certain things relative to their affairs, but that Hearne was not present. This testimony was as follows: “Well, he said the boys were running the other place, he and Hearne had the other place, and they decided to combine the whole thing and make one business out of it; they all be together and help. I asked him about the financial end. He said it stayed just where it was before, except the boys’ stock helped the financial ¡end along a little.” This evidence was objected to as incompetent but the objec
As stated, there was no evidence that Williams.■& Hearne took Williams’ sons into the firm, and there is no evidence that Hearne had anything to do with the taking in of anyone or was otherwise connected with the organization of the new firm. It is true there is evidence that Williams took his sons into a partnership, but there is no substantial evidence that Hearne had any connection with the change of the partners or any connection with the new 'firm. The partnership was dissolved by the admission of Williams’ sons as partners. The law has long since been settled that a retiring member of a partnership will continue liable to former dealers for the firm’s subsequent obligations contracted in the name of the old firm until such previous dealers have actual knowledge of the dissolution of the firm and the retirement- of the partner. [Gage Bros. & Co. v. Rogers Sisters, 51 Mo. App. l. c. 430; Parsons on Partnership, 409; 17 Am. and Eng. Ency. Law, 1120, and cases cited.]
In this case, however, we are presented with an entirely different state of facts as the use of the old firm name of Williams & Hearne was abandoned and the new one of Williams Sons & Company was adopted in which the name of Hearne was entirely omitted. The liability of the defendant Hearne was put to the jury on the theory that “when a partnership is dissolved and one of the partners continues in the business as before, the retiring partner, to protect himself from future liabilities, should see that public notice of such dissolution, if any, or of his retirement, is given in some manner so as fairly and reasonably to notify the public
We have given this case a careful and exhaustive consideration, and although many irregularities and errors were committed by the trial court in the admission of evidence and the giving of instructions, yet it manifestly appears that substantial justice was reached by the verdict of the jury and that a new trial would inevitably lead to the same result and compel the defendant to incur additional expense. Under these circumstances the statute has pointed out our duty by expressly forbidding an appellate court to reverse the judgment. [Vaughan v. Daniels, 98 Mo. 230, 11 S. W. 575; State ex rel. Jones v. Jones, 131 Mo. 194, 33 S. W. 23; Homuth v. Metropolitan St. Ry. Co., 129 Mo. 629, 31 S. W. 903; Moore v. Ry. Co., 176 Mo. 528, 76 S. W. 672.] -Upon a consideration of the entire record we find that the judgment was for the right party and it is accordingly affirmed. Cox and Gray, JJ., do not agree with the writer that the testimony quoted is all the testimony bearing upon the question of the respondent’s connection with the firm of Williams & Sons, and are of the opinion that on the whole testimony there was sufficient evidence to take that question to the jury,
Reference
- Full Case Name
- KEIM & McMILLAN HARDWARE COMPANY v. L. WILLIAMS
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- 3 cases
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- Published