1 Lans. 451 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1867
Present — Miller, Ingalls and Hogeboom, JJ.
By the Court
The simple question in this case is, whether the defendant, Miller, is liable in this action ? Whether he owes the debt otherwise, or is responsible to his partner for the same or for his share, is a question we are not called upon to decide, and is not in the case now presented to us. These are matters which may be adjusted in another action, perhaps in one between the defendants ; and if the defendant, Miller, is liable for this demand, he can be made to pay and cannot escape it. Nor does it follow that the plaintiff must lose his demand unless he can recover in this action. The defendant, Gale, interposes no defence, and a judgment must necessarily be obtained against him; and although it is not important to inquire on that subject, yet for anything which appears, he is quite as responsible as the other defendant. But these are considerations, which should "not be regarded in disposing of the legal questions involved in the present case. When this case was heard at General Term upon the facts presented by the plaintiff alone, it was held,
The principal questions presented, and the only questions out of which any controversy can arise, relate to the charge of the judge in the changed aspect of the case produced by the introduction of evidence on the part of the defendant, Miller. This charge embraced two propositions; and as the case stood, with the additional evidence introduced by the defendant, as to the fraudulent issue of the check, the rule laid down by the court when the case was before them for review was in no particular violated. The first proposition in the charge,' was, that the check must have been issued before the dissolution of the firm; and the second was, that it must have passed into the hands of the plaintiff before the dissolution. These two were blended together, and there was
The right to issue the check, then, after the dissolution depends upon the authority of a partner to create a liability in writing which did not previously- exist. In the National Bank v. Norton (1 Hill, 572), it was' held that one partner after dissolution cannot bind his copartners even by the renewal of a partnership note. Cowen, J., says: “ This is the making of a new contract by one for all the partners after his authority is revoked. During the continuance of the partnership he is entitled to act for all as their general agent. On dissolution he ceases to hold that character, and must be considered as a mere joint debtor. This leaves to him the power of payment in respect to debts due from the firm, but with slight exception, if any; nothing more.” (See, also, Mitchell v. Ostrom, 2 Hill, 520; Lansing v. Gaine, 2 John. R., 300; Lusk v. Smith, 8 Barb., 570 ; Sanford v. Mickles, 4 John. R., 224.) Willard, in his excellent treatise on Equity Jurisprudence (p. 727), says: “ It is scarcely necessary to add, in concluding this chapter, that the power of one partner to bind the firm ceases with the dissolution.”
According to these decisions the defendant, Harold C. -Gale, had no right to issue the check of the firm in payment of the partnership debt after the dissolution of the part
As to that portion of the charge which contains the proposition that the check must have passed into the plaintiff’s hands after the dissolution, it may be said that it is dependent u,ion the correctness of the first; for if issued without
The discussion had, disposes of the portion of the charge adverted to, and it is quite evident to my mind, that it was sound in law, entirely applicable to this case as presented, and assumed by both parties to exist; and could not, under any circumstances, possibly have misled the jury.
It is insisted by the defendant, that the verdict of the jury was erroneous, and that the case is a plain one in favor of the plaintiff. It was not claimed, upon the trial, that there was no disputed question of fact in the case for the jury, nor was any request made to the judge to take the case from the jury or to direct a verdict in favor of the plaintiff, as would have been eminently proper, if the position now taken is maintainable. Both parties appear to have assumed that the qu estion, as to the fraudulent making and issuing of the check, was in the case, and a question of fact for the jury; and I am not prepared to say that it is manifest that they decided erroneously, and entirely contrary to the evidence, or that there is no sufficient evidence to sustain the verdict. The case of the plaintiff rested mainly upon the testimony of himself, and the defendant, Harold G. Gale. If their testimony was to be relied upon, then the plaintiff was entitled to recover, as they testify quite positively to a state of facts, which made out a case in favor of the plaintiff. But this evidence was attacked, especially that of the defendant Gale, whom it was claimed was directly impeached.
Even if- the debt was due from the defendants .to-Hover, or the check had actually been made and issued prior to the dissolution, there was evidence in the case,
The fairness and good faith of the plaintiff, and the defendant, Gale, the truthfulness of their testimony, and the credit to be given to it, were subjects of serious dispute. It is manifest from the leading features of the case, to which I have made a brief reference, that the controversy between the parties presented questions of fact which it was the peculiar province of the jury to decide, with which the judge upon the trial, even if he had been called upon to do so, had no right to interfere, and which this court has no authority to disturb, as the evidence stands, according to well settled rides of law.
Some other points are pressed upon our attention; but I think it unnecessary to discuss them at length.
Ingalls, J., delivered an opinion for affirmance, as follows: The defendants were partners in the freighting business, at Livingston station, Columbia county; commencing October 1, 1860. On the 23d January, 1861, Miller & Gale were indebted to J. N. Hover in the sum of $156, for hay sold said firm, and said Hover was indebted to Harold C. Gale, one of said partners, in the sum of $120. Harold C. Gale paid Hover thirty-six dollars, being the difference between the two accounts, and drew a check, of which the following is a copy :■
“ Hudson, 1ST. Y., January 23, 1861.
“ Hudson River Bank. Pay to J. N. Hover, or bearer, one hundred and fifty-six dollars.
“MILLER & GALE.
“ $156.” .
The check was not delivered to Hover, but was retained by Harold C. Gale, by whom it was subsequently transferred to the plaintiff, and applied upon a note held by plaintiff against said Harold 0. Gale for $200. Subsequently to the execution of the check, Harold C. Gale sold and transferred his interest in said partnership to the defendant, Miller, and as apart of the arrangement, Miller assumed to pay the partnership debts to the sum of $2,046.39; but if they exceeded that sum, the excess was to be paid by Miller & Gale in equal proportions. The principal question litigated upon the trial was in regard to the time the check in question was transferred to the plaintiff; whether before or after the dissolution of the partnership of Miller & Gale; and the determination of that question involved the inquiry whether such partnership was actually dissolved on the 22d February oi 21st March, 1861. The written agreement between
. As-the plaintiff has taken exceptions to the charge of the . judge, we must examine, with a view to ascertain whethei
The judge charged the jury, in one particular, as follows: “As this case stands, you are bound to consider all the evidence that has been introduced, and not a single part of it is irrelevant.” We observe no objection to this direction. Certainly the jury were bound to consider all the evidence, as it was not their province to reject as irrelevant, evidence which the court had taken the responsibility to admit. Any other rule would be likely to work great injustice, as a party might have the benefit of an exception to the decision of the judge, in admitting evidence, and the advantage arising from the rejection thereof by the jury.
The judge properly charged the 'jury, in substance, that to sustain the plaintiff’s cause of action, they must find that the check was issued and passed to the plaintiff before the dissolution of the partnership. The judge further charged the jury as follows: “ If plaintiff received the check in the month of March, he received it after the dissolution of the copartnership, and it would not be a valid instrument in his hands, and plaintiff could not, in any view of the law, recover, in any form, in this action.” This portion of the charge must be construed in connection with that which preceded it, and the facts proved upon the trial. The court had already, substantially, submitted to the jury, for them to find, whether the check was transferred before the dissolution of the partnership, which embraced the inquiry, whether it was in February or March, 1861. We think it but reasonable, in construing this portion of the charge, to'precede it,by these words : “ If you find that the partnership was dissolved on the 22d February, 1861,” which would make the charge read as follows: “ If you find that the partnership was dissolved on the 22d February, 1861, and the plaintiff received the check in the month of March, he received it after the dissolution of the copartnership, and it would not be a valid instrument in his hands ; and the plaintiff could not, in any view of the law, recover, in any form, in this action.” The
It is evident that much of the charge was omitted in making up the case, which creates embarrassment in considering that which is inserted. We are of opinion that the charge was substantially correct, and that the plaintiff has not been prejudiced thereby. No error was committed in allowing evidence in regard to the check book and other papers of the firm, as such inquiry was material in investigating the transaction, to ascertain whether or not the check in question was embraced in settlement. Certainly a reasonable latitude of examination was allowable in investigating the transaction, and in this particular very much must be left to the discretion of the judge who tries the cause; and nothing short of a palpable abuse of such discretion should induce this court to interfere. The inquiry in regard to certain charges of dishonesty and stealing, claimed to have been made by Kniskern against Harold C. Gale, in the presence of the plaintiff, and the evidence of Jacob R. Gale and Kniskern, in relation thereto, were certainly harmless. Jacob R. Gale testifies that he did not hear Kniskern charge his brother with dishonesty, and Kniskern testifies that he did not know what he charged Gale with. It is hardly possible that any injury could have resulted to the plaintiff from this evidence, even though it be conceded that technical error was committed by admitting it, which I am not prepared to assume. In the trial of a cause, which is sharply contested, it not unfrequently happens that evidence is admitted or rejected, whereby some rule of evidence is violated; yet this court does not feel called upon to reverse a judgment, when it affirmatively appears that the party complaining could not have been injured thereby. (Woodruff v. McGrath, 32 N. Y., 255.) We are of opinion »that no substantial reason appears, calling for the reversal of this judgment, and the same should be affirmed, with costs.
Hogeboom, J., dissented.
Judgment affirmed.
See 44 Barb., 430.