29 S.E.2d 326 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1944
1. Where partners engage together in more than one business, and have employees who perform services interchangeably for the several businesses, and no diversity of interest as to the several enterprises appears the arrangement is that of one partnership engaged in more than one line of endeavor, and not that of several partnerships, even though the businesses are unrelated and employ separate trade names. Such a partnership, employing eight or more covered workers for some part of a day during each of twenty different weeks in a calendar year, is liable for the contributions imposed by the unemployment compensation law.
2. A petition showing a right to recover some amount, and having thereto attached a bill of particulars covering such amount, is not subject to dismissal on general demurrer, because of a failure to itemize in detail and furnish a bill of particulars supporting all items that might be recoverable in the action.
The defendant demurred generally to the petition on the ground that it set forth no cause of action, and that no facts were alleged showing any liability of the defendant. The court sustained the demurrer and dismissed the petition, assigning as reasons therefor: (1) that the alleged partnership did not constitute one employing *640 unit under the unemployment compensation law; that the three businesses of the firm were separate entities, and could not be considered jointly for the purpose of bringing the partnership within the terms of the said law; and since it did not appear that any one of the said businesses employed eight or more as required by the law, the petition set forth no cause of action against the defendant; and (2) that the plaintiff had not attached a sufficient bill of particulars, and did not by his allegations excuse the failure to furnish particulars respecting the number of employees of the three alleged businesses and the wages paid to them. To these rulings the plaintiff excepted.
1. In determining whether the trial judge erred in sustaining the general demurrer to the petition, it is first necessary to determine whether the arrangement described in the foregoing facts and alleged in the petition constituted one partnership employing eight or more workers, or whether the arrangement amounted to three separate partnerships and entities, no one of which employed as many as eight. It is the opinion of this court that only one partnership existed, which was a partnership engaged in three separate lines of endeavor. A partnership enterprise cannot be divided, without some sanction of law, into more than one legal entity. Under the laws of this State a partnership is not a being distinct from the members who compose it. Chambers v. Sloan,
The order sustaining the demurrer to the petition recited as a further reason for the ruling, that the plaintiff could not excuse his failure to secure information and to annex to the petition an itemized statement describing all the employees of the firm and their wages and the amounts of the taxes. However, there was attached to the petition a bill of particulars covering a portion of the alleged information (the sum certain sued for and the supporting calculations). The petition showed a right to recover in some amount, and the court erred in dismissing the action on general demurrer.
Judgment reversed. Sutton, P. J., and Felton, J., concur.