(After stating the foregoing facts.)’
The Civil Code, § 2634, declares that “The dissolution of a partnership by the retiring of an ostensible partner must be made known to the creditors and to the world.” It is not in terms .stated what character of notice must be given, or who fall within
*310
the designation of “creditors,” and who within that of ‘The world.” This section is a codification of the general law, and not of a legislative enactment, and in construing it, decisions of other courts as well as our own may be looked to. There is a difference between the kind of notice required to be given to creditors and to the world. To the former actual notice must be given.
Ennis
v.
Williams,
30
Ga.
691;
Ewing
v.
Trippe,
73
Ga.
777. “As to the notice which should be given to The world/ no inflexible rule can be laid down. Publication in -a public gazette circulated in the locality in which the business of the partnership has been conducted, if such publication is fair and reasonable as to its terms and the number of times it is made, is usually sufficient notice to the world.”
Askew
v. Silman, 95
Ga.
681. “It is not an absolute, inflexible rule that there must be a publication in a newspaper, to protect a retiring partner. Any means of fairly publishing the fact of such dissolution as widely as possible, in order to put the public on its guard, — as, by advertisement, public notice in the manner usual in the community, the withdrawal of the exterior indications of the partnership, — are proper to be considered on the question of notice.” Lovejoy
v.
Spafford,
The difference between the notice required to be given to creditors and that which must be given to the world at large being thus established, the next inquiry is, who fall within the class designated as “creditors,” as contradistinguished from “the world?” It is of course clear that one to whom the firm is indebted at the time of dissolution is a creditor.
Camp
v.
Southern Banking & Trust Co.,
97
Ga. 582.
But the word * creditors,” as used in the section of the code, is not confined to this narrow meaning. In order to reach a proper construction of the rule requiring notice of the dissolution of a firm to be'given so as to relieve a retiring ostensible partner, the reason of the rule may be considered. The reason generally assigned in the text-books and reports is that persons who have dealt with the firm, as by selling to them or crediting them, are presumed to know who composed such firm, and to rely upon the credit of each and all of them; and that having ascertained the existence of the partnership, and having trusted it, they may act upon this knowledge until they have been informed that the partnership no longer exists; while those who have never dealt with the firm are not presumed to know who compose it, and are
*311
not entitled to the same notice as the former class. See Prentiss
v.
Sinclair,
What then will suffice as actual notice? In Austin
v.
Holland,
There was no controversy that G. W. Bush was originally a member of the firm of Bush & Hattaway, and that the plaintiff had previously dealt with them, selling them goods and falling within the designation of a creditor, as that word is used in the code. Defendants contend that G. W. Bush retired from the firm, and that C. O. Bush took his place; and evidence was offered that stationery was printed having the heading “G. O. Bush & Hattaway” as the name of the firm. This mere evidence of printing of stationery, without more, was not sufficient evidence of notice to the plaintiff; nor was the fact that a circular was sent out generally advertising a reduction in the price of garments and signed in the same manner. It did not appear, by proper evidence, that a copy of the circular or any of the stationery was mailed to the plaintiff or sent to any place from which it might be inferred that he saw it. Evidence was also offered to the effect-that a sign was placed on all the roads leading to the defendant’s place of business, advertising certain shoes, and signed “G. O. Bush & Hattaway.” It was proved, however, that the plaintiff’s place of business was twenty-one, miles distant from that of the defendants, and in, a different town; and it was not shown that any of the plaintiff’s agents or officers ever went to the place of business of the defendants or passed along any of the roads where the signs were placed.
A witness was offered to testify that the public generally knew that G. W. Bush gave his interest in the store to his son, C. O. Bush, in December, 1902. This was properly excluded. It was not an attempt to show that the fact referred to was generally knówn and talked about, or was a matter of common reputation. While the rule is often broadly stated that evidence of notoriety in the community is admissible as having some probative value on • the subject of notice to a member of such community; and while *313 one definition of notoriety is the quality of being generally known, yet it also has the meaning o£ being generally known and talked about. It is here used rather as the equivalent of reputation, and probably the more accurate expression would be that evidence of reputation was admissible. Professor Wigmore says that the ground on which this class of evidence is admissible is the probability that “when a matter is so much talked of in a community that a reputation arises about it, a member of that community, in his ordinary intercourse with others, will hear it mentioned, i. e. by express communication; and the question is whether the probability is that there would be such a general discussion and whether -the person is likely to have learned of that discussion.” 1 Wigmore, Ev. §245(3), 254. Doctor Wharton thus expresses the rule: “To prove cognizance of a particular fact, it has been held admissible, under circumstances to be hereaftér noticed, to show that such fact was at the time generally known and talked about in the neighborhood where the party in question resided, or was a matter of common reputation in the business community to which both parties belonged.” 1 Whar. Ev. (3d ed.) § 252. It would be going very far to allow a witness to state broadly that a thing was known to another or others than himself, or generally, without showing the facts. Knowledge is a condition of the mind; and it is carrying the doctrine too far to allow a witness to merely .give the state of mind of others, without more. The existence of a reputation may be shown; or the quality of an occurrence itself may sometimes be sufficient to admit the fact, in evidence. It is on this last-named theory that former accidents to a machine, claimed to have been defective within the knowledge of the owner or user of it, have been let in. 1 Wigmore, Ev. § 255; 1 Gr. Ev. (16th ed.) § 14. Besides, if the evidence offered were treated as the equivalent of evidence of general report or common reputation, it was not shown to have been at the place where the plaintiff did business or its agents were located. Evidence of reputation furnishes no. proof of the dissolution. It is admitted solely on the question of notice. Deputation or notoriety in the community is not itself notice. But it may be considered by the jury, with the ■other evidence, in determining whether an inference of notice to the person sought to be charged with it should be drawn. The *314 weight to he given to such evidence must depend much upon the surrounding facts of the case. Kuglar v. Garner, 74 Ga. 765; Askew v. Silman, 95 Ga. 678(4), supra.
That after the time of an alleged change in the firm a policy of insurance was written in the name of C. O. Bush & Hattaway was irrelevant as against a person not shown to have had any knowledge or notice thereof.
Parol evidence that one of the defendants wrote to the plaintiff a letter on stationery bearing the name of C. O. Bush & Hattaway, and used an envelope on which was 'printed the same name, and that the letter was never returned, was properly rejected, no foundation being laid for introducing secondary evidence, and the want of testimony as to the stamping and mailing preventing the raising even of an inference of the receipt of the latter by the plaintiff, so as to charge it with notice.
The evidence on some of the material issues in the ease, especially on the subject of whether the plaintiff had actual notice of the dissolution of the firm, being conflicting, and the jury having found for the plaintiff, there was no error in overruling the motion for a new trial.
Judgment affirmed.
