72 Wash. 164 | Wash. | 1913
It is sought in this action to establish a liability against respondents as partners. The court below held that respondents were not partners, and that judgment should go against Howard P. Savage alone.
There is no evidence from which it can be held that, as between themselves, the respondents, who were brothers, were partners. In fact, it clearly appears that they were not. The main contention of appellant is that Charles G. Savage held himself out as a partner, and is therefore liable as such. It is now too late to question the rule that, irrespective of what is the true relation as between themselves, persons can so hold themselves out as partners in a particular business and thereby induce others to deal with them as such
The business out of which these debts grew was a small mill business at Mineral, in which Charles G. Savage worked
In order to work the estoppel upon which the rule of liability as a partner to third persons exists, it must appear that the one upon whom the liability is sought to be fixed does something which induces other persons to act and rely thereon to their detriment. It is not what Howard P. Savage might have done, nor what others might have thought, but what Charles G. Savage himself has done, what he himself has said, or the manner in which he has acted that has led
We are therefore of the opinion that there is no reason in fact or law which establishes error in the judgment, and the same is affirmed.
Crow, C. J., Ellis, Main, and Fullerton, JJ., concur.