13 S.E.2d 694 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1941
Lead Opinion
1. The amendment to the bill of exceptions sufficiently states in substance an amendment alleged to have been disallowed by the trial court, on which ruling error is assigned in the bill of exceptions on the ground named in exceptions pendente lite, and is allowed.
2. Under the pleadings and the evidence the plaintiff could not hope to obtain a verdict which could be upheld; and as only a question of law was involved and was properly concluded by the judge against the plaintiff, the direction of the verdict in favor of the defendant was not harmful error.
3. Special grounds 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, and 9 of the motion for new trial are without merit.
4. Grounds 6-a and 10 of the motion for new trial are without merit.
5. The court did not err in disallowing the amendment offered by the plaintiff.
The defendant filed an answer denying the substantial allegations of the petition, and by amendment set up that the plaintiff partnership was not entitled to recover on the alleged cause of action, in that the account sued on was an illegal and gambling transaction, and that Fenner, Beane Ungerleider was estopped and not entitled to recover against him because, while acting in a confidential and fiduciary capacity as brokers, that partnership gave him incorrect and inaccurate information as to the status of his account, on which he relied and acted to his injury and damage.
The evidence adduced on the trial was substantially as follows: During the year 1933 Nelson traded with a stock-brokerage firm, Fenner, Beane Ungerleider, which, on account of subsequent operations in the same name, after changes in personnel, will be referred to hereinafter as Fenner, Beane Ungerleider (1). This partnership was composed of more than twenty members. On September 14, 1933, there was a purported or intended admission of a new member, Hoyle Jones, into the partnership. Business continued in the same name, which entity will hereinafter be referred to as Fenner, Beane Ungerleider (2). On October 21, 1933, under the terms of a written agreement between the members composing the partnership of Fenner, Beane Ungerleider (2), including Hoyle Jones, two of the partners, Samuel Ungerleider and Abe Ungerleider, retired as members, effective as of October 31, 1933. The surviving partners continued to do a stock-brokerage business under the former name, hereinafter referred to as Fenner, Beane Ungerleider (3). Subsequently there were admissions and withdrawals as to personnel until the business became conducted as Fenner Beane, and it was the latter-named entity which, on April 21, 1937, filed the present suit against H. B. Nelson. There was evidence as to various transactions between Nelson and Fenner, Beane Ungerleider (1) in 1933, resulting in a balance of $18,787.16 against him, as shown by the itemized statement introduced in evidence, this account developing under his customer's contract as entered into on March 16, 1933, with the original partnership, *603 a copy of which was introduced in evidence. Nelson gave certain testimony, the purport of which was to show that because of certain conduct on the part of Fenner, Beane Ungerleider (1) he was injured and damaged by that partnership in its improper handling or failing to properly handle his account on a declining market, in consequence of which he contended, in effect, that he was not liable for the full amount claimed by Fenner, Beane Ungerleider (1). He also asserted (about which the evidence was in conflict) that the transactions were of an illegal and gambling nature, in that no actual delivery of stocks was ever intended between the parties. Other evidence, not deemed necessary to be set out for a decision of the case, was introduced.
After the conclusion of the introduction of evidence by both sides, counsel for the defendant moved for a directed verdict, on the ground, among others, that the plaintiff did not show any right to recover, inasmuch as the transactions were had with the old partnership of Fenner, Beane Ungerleider (1), as constituted on July 20, 1933, which had been dissolved, and that there was no evidence that the assets of that partnership or its right of action against Nelson had ever passed to Fenner Beane. Thereupon the plaintiff offered an amendment naming the surviving partners of Fenner, Beane Ungerleider (1) as plaintiffs, suing for the use of Fenner Beane, which the court disallowed. Counsel for the plaintiff stated to the court that the judgment should be in the nature of a nonsuit if the court was disposed to direct a verdict; but, upon a renewed motion of counsel for the defendant, the court ruled that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover, and directed a verdict for the defendant. The plaintiff filed exceptions pendente lite to the judgment disallowing the proffered amendment, and to the court's refusal to enter a judgment of nonsuit, and to the direction of the verdict for the defendant. The plaintiff moved for a new trial on the general grounds, and by amendment added several special grounds hereinafter dealt with. The court overruled the motion, and the plaintiff excepted, assigning error on that ruling, and assigning error also on the rulings excepted to pendente lite.
1. In this court the plaintiff filed an amendment to its bill of exceptions by making more specific reference to an amendment which the court disallowed, and which is referred to in the foregoing *604
statement. While an exact copy of the amendment is not attached to the bill of exceptions or set out verbatim therein, what purports to be the substance of the amendment is stated in the amendment, and is sufficient to enable this court to ascertain the question of law which is raised by the exceptions pendente lite to the disallowance of the amendment in the trial court, the substance of the amendment being set out in the exceptions pendente lite, and on which exceptions pendente lite error is assigned in the bill of exceptions. The amendment to the bill of exceptions in the respect named is accordingly allowed. See Walker v.Equitable Mortgage Co.,
2. Special grounds 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, and 9 of the motion for new trial may properly be considered in connection with the general grounds. They complain, in brief, that the direction of the verdict was error, for the reasons (1) that the issues should have been submitted to a jury; (2) that the evidence authorized a finding in some amount for the plaintiff; (3) that the court erred in ruling that the plaintiff did not have title to the cause of action; (4) that the judge erred in ruling that a change in the personnel worked a dissolution of the partnership of Fenner, Beane Ungerleider (1), and that no right was shown in Fenner Beane to the cause of action sued on, whereas the evidence showed a continuing partnership with the right of Fenner Beane to bring the suit; (5) that the evidence sustained all of the allegations of the petition, and even the defendant's testimony raised only a question as to what amount should be awarded by a jury to the plaintiff; (6) that the evidence established that the plaintiff partnership was a continuing partnership and successor to the rights of Fenner, Beane Ungerleider as that partnership existed on July 20, 1933; (7) that as all evidence relating to changes in the partnership appeared exclusively from the plaintiff's evidence, and if it supported the ruling that Fenner Beane did not have title to the chose in action, the account against H. B. Nelson, a nonsuit or dismissal, and not the direction of a verdict, should have been entered; (8, 9) (substantially the equivalent of portions of the aforementioned grounds). Counsel for the plaintiff contend in their brief, that, no denial of partnership having been made by the defendant, no proof of the partnership was necessary; that the defendant's general denial *605 did not raise an issue of partnership; that the changes in the membership of a New York limited partnership as was here involved does not dissolve the partnership under the New York law; that while the original articles of partnership of Fenner, Beane Ungerleider (1) were not in evidence, the written agreement of October 21, 1933, introduced in evidence, between the members of the partnership of Fenner, Beane Ungerleider (2), whereby Samuel Ungerleider and Abe Ungerleider retired therefrom, showed inferentially that the partnership was a continuing one whereby, under the law of New York, admissions or withdrawals of members did not work a dissolution, that the same entity continued in the name of Fenner Beane, and that named partnership succeeded to or owned all the assets of the original Fenner, Beane Ungerleider partnership, and that such partnership was fully authorized to maintain the present suit without showing a written transfer of the right to the chose in action; that this court could determine that the State of New York had adopted the uniform limited-partnership act, under section 20 of which a change in a partnership without an intention to dissolve it does not result in a dissolution; that where the plaintiff failed to prove a right to maintain the action, a nonsuit, and not the direction of a verdict, was the proper and required procedure; and that the alleged illegality of the contract between Fenner, Beane Ungerleider (1) and Nelson, the defendant, can not support the direction of the verdict.
All of the foregoing contentions may be disposed of in the following general discussion. The law of New York not having been pleaded and proved, it must be taken, under repeated decisions of the Supreme Court and this court, that the common law prevails in that State with respect to the question whether the admission or withdrawal of a member works a dissolution of a partnership. It is also well settled that the courts of this State will determine for themselves what is the common law on any issue. A partnership is a distinct legal entity. Drucker v. Wellhouse,
Applying these principles of law to the facts of the present case, the following rulings are required: The partnership of Fenner, Beane Ungerleider (1) was dissolved by the admission of Hovle Jones as a member thereof on September 14, 1933. The articles of agreement between the members of the partnership of Fenner, Beane Ungerleider (2), containing also the signature of Hovle Jones, under date of October 21, 1933, show that Abe Ungerleider and Samuel Ungerleider retired. Accordingly that partnership was dissolved, and Fenner, Beane Ungerleider (3) constituted a new entity. It is argued that the agreement shows inferentially that the partnership of Fenner, Beane Ungerleider was to be continued and that Fenner, Beane Ungerleider (3) was the same entity and owned the assets formerly belonging to Fenner, Beane *607 Ungerleider (2). However, even if Fenner, Beane
Ungerleider (3) had obtained any written assignment of the assets of Fenner, Beane Ungerleider (2), the record does not show that the members of the partnership of Fenner, Beane and Ungerleider (1) ever executed any written transfer of assets to any subsequent partnership. Furthermore, the partnership of Fenner, Beane Ungerleider (3) was dissolved by admitted changes in its personnel before the partnership of Fenner Beane came into existence; and even if Fenner, Beane Ungerleider (3) had acquired any transfer in writing of the chose in action sued on, no written assignment or transfer is shown to have been made to Fenner Beane. Manifestly the partnership of Fenner Beane, the plaintiff, did not show any right to the chose in action, the account between Fenner, Beane Ungerleider (1) and H. B. Nelson, the defendant. It could not hope to recover under the pleading and the evidence, and the judge did not commit harmful error in directing the verdict for the defendant. While ordinarily the proper procedure would be to direct a nonsuit where the plaintiff fails to make out a prima facie case under the allegations of a petition, which if proved and not overcome by other evidence introduced by the plaintiff or the defendant would entitle the plaintiff to a verdict, still it has been held by the Supreme Court of this State that where the plaintiff's right turns exclusively upon a question of law, and it is impossible to render a verdict in the plaintiff's favor which could be upheld, the direction of a verdict in favor of the defendant, after his introduction of evidence, even if the direction of a verdict be considered irregular, is harmless and it would be idle to require a new trial. Laing v.Americus,
In Thornton v. Reeve, supra, where suit was brought on a chose in action, but the plaintiff, as assignee, did not allege that the assignment was in writing, the court held that a general demurrer was properly sustained. If in the present case the defendant had filed a general demurrer to the petition, which did not allege a written assignment of the chose in action, obviously the court would have been obliged to sustain the demurrer. Clearly then the plaintiff is not harmed by the direction of the verdict. See Hidalgo v.
McCauley,
3. Ground 6-a of the motion for new trial complains of the refusal of the court to admit certain testimony as to no written agreement having been entered into as to an interest in the assets of Fenner, Beane Ungerleider (1) at the time Hoyle Jones entered the partnership on September 14, 1933. Such testimony would not, under the rulings hereinbefore made, have shown any fact affecting the right of the plaintiff to recover, inasmuch as it held no written transfer or assignment of the assets of any of the preceding partnerships, and no harm is made to appear.
4. Ground 10 complains that the court erred in admitting certain testimony over objection of the plaintiff. It appears that the court admitted such testimony conditionally, subject to later objection of the plaintiff. The objection was not renewed, and under numerous rulings of the Supreme Court and this court the plaintiff can not now be heard to complain.
5. The court did not err in rejecting the proffered amendment *609
under which the plaintiff sought to sue in the name of the surviving partners of Fenner, Beane Ungerleider (1) for the use of Fenner Beane. "Since such an amendment is allowable for the designated purpose `of enforcing the rights of such plaintiff,' some showing should be made to the court that some right of the original plaintiff is connected with the cause of action he desires to assert in the name of the nominal party to be substituted; but this right need not be so perfect as to be capable of direct enforcement, either in law or in equity." Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Co. v. Hart LumberCo.,
Judgment affirmed. Stephens, P. J., and Felton, J.,concur.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the conclusion that it appears from all the evidence that the plaintiff is not entitled to recover, and that there appears no error in the direction of the verdict for the defendant. In reply to the suggestion that a nonsuit would lie only at the completion of the plaintiff's evidence, and therefore would not lie after the defendant had introduced evidence and the case had been closed, there appears no authority to the effect that a nonsuit may be granted only at the end of the introduction of the plaintiff's evidence, but in decisions of the Supreme Court it seems to be recognized that a nonsuit may be granted upon the introduction of all testimony in the case, both by the plaintiff and by the defendant, if it appears from all the testimony that the plaintiff has not proved his case as laid. See Battle v. Royster Guano Co.,
It is thus conceded that a nonsuit may be granted after all the evidence is in. See also Kelly v.Strouse,
While the plaintiff also contended before the court, and in assignment of error in the bill of exceptions, that the verdict for the defendant was improperly directed, because the evidence authorized a verdict for the plaintiff, the plaintiff also, on the trial, as appears in the motion for new trial, objected to the motion of the defendant to direct a verdict for the defendant, upon the ground that the plaintiff's case should be dismissed, and assigns error in the bill of *611
exceptions upon the direction of a verdict, on the ground that the court should have either granted a nonsuit or dismissed the case. It does not appear that the verdict for the defendant was directed without an opportunity having been afforded the plaintiff to voluntarily dismiss the case. Had it appeared that such opportunity had not been given to the plaintiff, a different question would be presented, and it might be that the court erred in directing a verdict for the defendant instead of granting a nonsuit. In Gowen v. NewOrleans Naval Stores Co.,
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in all that is said in the opinion, except as to the reason why the plaintiff was not entitled to a nonsuit. In my opinion the proper disposition of a case, after introduction of evidence by both plaintiff and defendant, is by verdict, either by the jury or by direction of the court, followed, of course, by judgment, for the reason that there is but one provision of law that I know of to test the sufficiency of the evidence introduced on the part of both parties, and that is by a motion for new trial. The only way the plaintiff could have protected itself against the probable or possible effects of an adjudication (and I express no opinion on that subject) would have been to dismiss the case before a verdict had been rendered. *612