117 Ga. 151 | Ga. | 1903
(after stating the foregoing facts.)
If this proposition be true, we think that there is nothing confusing or inconsistent between the two sections of the code. (1) If one only receives part of the profits as a salary or compensation for services, he is not a partner. Civil Code, § 2629. (2) If he actually retires from the firm and fails to give notice thereof as required by section 2634, he is confessedly not a partner, but is estopped from denying that he is liable as such to certain creditors. (3) If by reason of the terms of the contract he is not a partner interse, but has a joint interest in the property which he has embarked in the business, and which may be increased or decreased as a result thereof, he is liable to third persons. (4) If under the contract he is not a partner inter se, but is jointly interested in profits and losses, he is treated as a partner so far as third persons are concerned, by virtue of his express agreement to pay the losses. He assumed that relation to outsiders, and is liable to them
The administrator further insists, that as the law fixes one year as a reasonable time within which the estate of a decedent should be wound up, the same period is prima facie sufficient for a surviving partner to collect the assets, pay the debts, and settle with the representative of the deceased partner; and in the absence of facts showing that more time was required, we think the analogy is fair, and one year ought to be enough to enable a survivor to come to an accounting with the administrator. The refusal of the administrator to consent to a division in kind is no excuse for the surviving partner’s failure to wind up the partnership affairs within the time required by law. If he desired to secure the right of a division in kind, he should have paid the debts, and, on the refusal of the administrator to appoint an appraiser, he could have applied to the ordinary to name assessors, under the provisions of the Civil Code, § 2647. If the administrator had sought to enjoin such action, or otherwise prevented the surviving partner from pursuing a remedy or enforcing a right granted to him by law, this might have afforded sufficient excuse for the delay.
Judgment affirmed.