154 P. 547 | Okla. | 1916
This action was commenced December 28, 1911, to foreclose a chattel mortgage given as security for the payment of a promissory note executed by defendant to plaintiffs. The petition, among other things, alleged that plaintiffs were a copartnership doing business in Sentinel, Okla., under the firm name and style of *789 Bolen Bros. Defendant answered, setting up as a defense that plaintiffs were transacting business in the State of Oklahoma under a fictitious name and designation not showing the names of the persons interested in said partnership, and had not filed with the clerk of the district court of Washita county, Okla., a certificate stating the names in full of the members of said copartnership and their place of residence, and caused the same to be published in some newspaper for four weeks in said county as required by law, and prior to the bringing of said action, and that there were newspapers published in said county of Washita at and prior to the filing of said action. At the trial, December 12, 1912, the parties entered into a stipulation that the members of the firm were W.C. Bolen and Park Bolen, and that they had never published any statement or filed any certificate in the office of the clerk of the district court as provided in sections 5023, 5025, Comp. Laws 1909 (sections 4469, 4471, Rev. Laws 1910). Defendant then moved to dismiss plaintiffs' action because of such failure to comply with the statute, which motion was by the court sustained, and from the judgment rendered in favor of defendant, plaintiffs bring error.
The sole question to be determined is whether it was incumbent upon. W.C. Bolen and. Park Bolen, doing business under the firm name of "Bolen Bros.," to comply with the statute above referred to before they could prosecute this cause of action against defendant; in other words, is "Bolen Bros." a fictitious name or designation within the meaning of section 5023, supra? The question has heretofore been before this court, with such conclusions reached that both parties to the present case are *790 asserting their respective contentions under different decisions.
In Patterson et al. v. Byers,
"Now, we think the name 'Patterson,' being the true surname of every member of the partnership known as the Patterson Furniture Company, can in no sense be said to be a fictitious name. And, under the ruling of the California Supreme Court in construing this statute, the word 'Patterson,' being the true surname of the members composing the Patterson Furniture Company, is a name that discloses the names of the members of the partnership, and that such a designation and doing business under such a title is not doing business under a fictitious name, or under a name which does not disclose the true names of the partners, and that partners doing business under such an appellation are not within the provisions of the sections referred to, and are not required to file and publish the certificate therein required."
Our statute was taken from California, and the decision in the above case was rested upon the cases of Pendleton et al. v.Cline et al.,
The doctrine announced in the Patterson Case has never been overruled by this court, notwithstanding the decision inBaker v. Van Ness,
In Carlock et al. v. Cagnacci,
From the above cases it must be concluded that a partnership doing business under the firm name and style *794 of Bolen Bros. was not transacting business under a fictitious name or designation, when composed of persons whose names were Bolen, and who were brothers, such as would make the doing of business by it without compliance with the statute, in violation of law, or preclude them as partners from recovering in the present action should they establish their claim. An excellent case supporting this conclusion is In re RichardsBros. (D.C.), 206 Fed. 932. There, after making special mention of the Pendleton v. Cline Case, it was said:
"The courts of Oklahoma, South Dakota, and North Dakota followed the reasoning of the California court in Pendleton v.Cline, supra. Patterson v. Byers,
It follows that the trial court erred in sustaining the defendant's motion to dismiss plaintiffs' petition, for which the cause is reversed and remanded.
All the Justices concur.