200 A. 822 | Conn. | 1938
The writ named as defendants Hugh C. Leighton, Sr. and Hugh C. Leighton, Jr., both of *502 Darien, Connecticut, and The Leighton Baking and Restaurant Corporation, a New York corporation. The complaint was the common counts, and the bill of particulars set forth the items of goods (meats) alleged to have been sold and delivered to the defendants. The individual defendants pleaded a general denial; the corporation was defaulted for failure to plead. After trial of the case the court entered judgment for the plaintiff against all of the defendants. In response to a motion by the defendants Leighton the trial court filed a special finding of facts upon which the judgment was predicated. This embodied facts as to the situation and relations of the defendants and their transactions with the plaintiff, more fully stated in the finding on appeal hereinafter summarized, from which the court reached and stated conclusions that each of the three defendants acted as principal and as agent for the other two and that, therefore, a partnership existed between them.
The first contention of the appealing defendants is that the complaint is not sufficient to support the judgment because it contains no allegation of partnership or of operative facts constituting a partnership. So far as concerns the failure to expressly name and designate the defendants as partners or allege the existence of a partnership between them, a decisive answer is afforded by Hotchkiss v. DeVita,
The claim that the special finding does not support the judgment against the defendants as partners depends upon a contention that a relation of principal and agent of each defendant to the others is not sufficient to hold them liable as partners, but that it must appear that there was a sharing, between them, of profits, or at least an agreement, express or implied, for such a distribution. The place, effect and weight of participation in profits in determining as to the existence of a partnership relation has been under consideration in a multitude of cases, as is indicated by the note 18 L.R.A. (N.S.) 963 et seq. and with variant and sometimes irreconcilable results. 20 R.C.L. 823. It suffices for the present purposes that the practical consensus of modern authority is that, important as is profit-sharing, when it is found to exist, as an indicia of that community of interest which characterizes the partnership relation (Parker v. Canfield,
It follows that the special finding that the defendants were principal and agent each to the other is sufficient, in that respect, to support the judgment. The further claim that the corporate defendant could not be a member of a partnership, not having been raised in any way upon the trial, may not be entertained on appeal. Booth v. Booth Bayliss Commercial School, Inc.,
The assignments of error in the conduct of the trial seek corrections of the finding and attack the conclusions pertaining to the mutual relations of principal and agent found to have existed between all of the defendants. No corrections can be made which are so material as to impair those conclusions. The finding, as corrected, includes the following facts: The corporate defendant, of which Leighton, Sr. was president and Leighton, Jr. vice-president, conducted, from 1934, a restaurant at White Plains, New York, of which Leighton, Sr. and in his absence Leighton, Jr. *506 had charge. It was furnished with antiques owned by Leighton, Sr. personally. About 1934 Leighton, Sr. operated a restaurant at Ardsley, New York, and in 1935 he leased a restaurant, thereafter known as "Leighton's Halfway House," in Darien, which was operated and managed by the two Leightons. The receipts from the Darien and Ardsley places were regularly collected by the cashier of the restaurant at White Plains and all payments to the plaintiff were made by checks of the corporation. Leighton, Sr. originally negotiated with the plaintiff for the purchase of merchandise and an account was opened, for the balance of which this action is brought. Thereafter until May 8th, 1936, the plaintiff continued to supply merchandise ordered by Leighton, Sr., Leighton, Jr. and Eugene Denari who was head chef and purchaser at the White Plains restaurant. The goods were for the most part delivered to the White Plains restaurant but were used in varying amounts also in the Ardsley and Darien restaurants as their necessities required. They were all accepted and so used without question as to the authority of the person ordering them. When the White Plains restaurant closed on May 11th, 1936, the provisions on hand were sent to the Darien place. These and the other facts found are sufficient to support the conclusion that the defendants so acted as to each other as principal and agent as to warrant their being held to be partners, under the principles above adverted to, and consequently liable as such.
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.