58 Mich. 72 | Mich. | 1885
This action is assumpsit to recover the amount due upon a joint and several promissory note made by the defendants and payable to the plaintiff. The defendants pleaded the general issue, with notice of set-off, and filed a bill of particulars containing their matters of set-off.
The plaintiff and defendant Fargo, on the 19th day of March, 1884, were copartners in business in Muskegon, Michigan, and had been for about one year prior thereto, prior to which time Gardiner had been conducting the business alone. On the 19th day of March, 1884, the defendants purchased of the plaintiff all the goods, personal property, fixtures, book accounts of every kind and nature, of the firm of Gardiner & Fargo, as far as the interest that the plaintiff as copartner with said Fargo had therein; and also plaintiff’s interest in the book accounts owned by the said
To the offer of the several cheques in evidence, designated in the bill of exceptions by numbers from 1 to 12 inclusive, the plaintiff’s counsel objected for the reason that the evidence offered was immaterial and irrelevant, because by the terms of the bill of sale from the plaintiff to defendants, already in' evidence, no indebtedness of the plaintiff owing to the firm of Gardiner & Fargo was transferred thereby to the defendants, and that the several cheques, or the amounts thereof, were not a proper set-off against the plaintiff’s claim on the note sued upon in this case ; which objection was sustained by the court. The defendants also offered to show that the plaintiff, while he and defendant Fargo were co-partners, took fifty-one gallons of oil belonging to the firm .of Gardiner & Fargo, of the value of $6.63, and that no
The defendants’ claim, as quoted from their brief, is that “the defense does not consist of a set-off by an account owing by the plaintiff to one of the defendants and appearing on the books of the firm, and is in no way governed by Learned v. Ayres 41 Mich. 677, or similar decisions cited by plaintiff, but rather an attempt to show that the plaintiff owes a legal duty to the defendants to deliver to them the merchandise and pay to them the money drawn from the firm’s funds. "Where there is a duty, there is a corresponding liability. The plaintiff and defendant Fargo having been copartners, it must be presumed that each had a knowledge of the sum contributed by each, the amount of profits, expenses and losses, and the sum drawn by each during the existence of their copartnership, and the knowledge of these facts, together with what all had a right to assume, — good faith and open dealing between the partners, — the value of each partner’s interest in the concern was easily ascertained. The partnership assets consisted of merchandise, credits and moneys. It cannot be important where the merchandise, credits or money happened to be at the time of sale. So long as they belonged to the copartnership, Gardiner’s interest in all passed by the sale to the defendants.”
The presumption of knowledge of the facts above stated, coupled with the terms of the written assignment, in which it is expressly stated that Gardiner grants and conveys all the goods, personal property, fixtures, book accounts, of every kind and nature, of the firm of Gardiner & Fargo, “ as far as the interest that the said James P. Gardiner, as copartner, has therein,” is conclusive that
The other items of set-off were submitted to the jury under proper instructions.
The judgment of the circuit court must be affirmed.