49 N.H. 225 | N.H. | 1870
The principal question is whether, under all the circumstances, Mrs. Flanders, in order to protect herself from liability for the price of the goods in question, was required to notify the plaintiffs of her retirement from the firm with which she had been connected.
In the firm of C. Fletcher & Co., Mrs. Flanders was not a nominal, a dormant nor a secret partner, but she was an ostensible partner. Col Iyer on Partnership §4. ‘ T -understand,” (said Mr. Justice Story,) “the common meaning of secret partnership to be a partnership where the existence of certain persons as partners is not avoAved or made knoAvn to the public by any of the partners. "Where all the partners are publicly made known, Avhctker it be by one or all the partners, it is no longer & secret partnership, for this is generally used in contradistinction to notorious and open partnership. And it makes no difference in this particular, whether the business of the firm be carried on in the name of one person only, or of him and company.” United States Bank v. Binney, 5 Mason 126.
The principles upon which this responsibility is cast upon the retiring partner, are founded upon obvious considerations of justice and public policy. Where one of two innocent parties must suffer from giving a credit, he should suffer whose negligence has misled the other. Story on Partnership § 160 ; Collyer on Partnership § 580; Benton v. Chamberlin, 23 Vt. 713; Farrar v. Deflinne, 1 Carrington & Kirwan 580; Edwards v. McFall, before cited; 3; Kent’s Com. *66.
As to the world in general, such notice need not be actual; it may be constructive and may implied from circumstances. It must be such as a jury would deem reasonable; and probably a publication of the dissolution in a local newspaper would generally be deemed sufficient. But as to persons who have been in the habit of dealing with the firm, it is requisite that actual notice be brought home to them, or at least that the credit was given under circumstances from which actual notice might be inferred: Collyer on Partnership, §533 ; Chamberlain’s Commercial Law, 215, 216; Zollar v. Janvrin, 47 N. H. 327 ; 3 Kents Com. *67.
In the present case, it is not pretended that any public notice of Mrs. Flanders’ retirement was ever given. The business continued to be conducted in the same place and under the same-style, either with her express knowledge and consent, or by her negligence : it is immaterial which.
But, as we have seen, a general notice by publication unless brought home to the actual knowledge of these plaintiffs,'would not preclude their demand in this suit, if they had been accustomed to have dealings with the firm of which the retiring member had been an ostensible partner; and the jury have found that at the time of the sale of the goods in this case the plaintiffs had no knowledge of the dissolution of the defendants firm.
But the defendant says that by the withdrawal of Locke from the firm, on the 1st of July, the old partnership of Deering, Miliken & Co., composed of six persons, including Locke, was dissolved, that a new partnership and a new firm was thereby created, which, although composed of the five remaining members was in fact a new creation and a new concern, as much independent of the old firm as if it had been created by an associotion of entirely different people, in a ‘ difr ferent business, negotiating at another place and under another style and designation — and therefore, her firm, having been dissolved before the creation of this new firm, the two firms never had any dealings with each other. Consequently, she says, it was not requisite for her protection, that she should give special notice to the newly consti
It is a sufficient answer, to this proposition to repeat the observation that an ostensible partner, retiring from a firm, cannot protect herself from liability on account of subsequent contracts made with the apparently continuing firm with which he had been connected, by parties with whom the firm may have had no dealings, unless reasonable, public notice of the dissolution have been given.
But we do not regard the change which took place in the plaintiff’s firm on the 1st of July, as being of that character which would excuse the defendant from giving actual notice to the firm of Deering, Milliken & Co., as constituted prior thereto, in order to exonerate herself from liability in this case.
We think that the firm, composed of these five plaintiffs must be regarded as substantially, and for all practical purposes, the same firm with which the defendant’s firm previously had dealings. There was no such change in the plaintiff’s firm on the 1st of July, as would seem to affect the relations of the firm with its customers or the public. It was a change important only to themselves-; or at any rate, not important to the debtors of the firm, however it may have been with regard to its creditors.
There was no external change in the business affairs of the plaintiffs.
As to the world, and as to everybody except creditors, dealings with the association, it was as much the same firm before and after the 1st of July, as a corporation, one of whose six or seven directors may have died or resigned, is the same corporation.
Any considerable change in the constituency of the firm, or in its style and designation, or the character of its business or its location might present a very different case and different considerations ; but these plaintiffs manifested no outward change in their commercial relations or situation. The remaining five continued to do business of the same character as formerly, at the same place, by the same style of firm, with the same old customers; and, like the defendant’s firm, having given no public notice of the retirement of one of their number, (who, like Mrs. Flanders, must be regarded as an ostensible partner), not only the present plaintiffs, but Locke also continued to be responsible to all persons who had given or who might give credit to the firm on account of Locke’s connection with it.
Judgment on the verdict.