179 P. 523 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1919
This is an appeal from a judgment by default, the defendants declining to answer after order overruling their demurrer to the complaint.
From that pleading it appears that the plaintiffs had obtained a judgment against Albert D. Hagopian for work and labor performed, and that subsequently, in attempting to satisfy such judgment in proceedings supplementary to execution, they learned for the first time that Jas. D. and Baxter D. Hagopian were copartners of Albert in the enterprise upon which the plaintiffs' labor had been performed. It also appears from the complaint that the said judgment is still unsatisfied, and in this action judgment is prayed as against the copartnership and Jas. D. and Baxter D. Hagopian.
Generally and at common law a partnership obligation is joint, and not joint and several. Accordingly a judgment *585
against less than all the partners upon such a liability extinguishes the original claim against all, for the joint obligation has been merged in the judgment, and the obligation being joint, the individual partners have not undertaken to be severally liable. (1 Freeman on Judgments, sec. 231;Wood v. Watkinson,
This rule obtains even where the partners not made defendants were dormant or silent partners whose connection with the firm was unknown to the plaintiff when he commenced his action. (23 Cyc. 1212; Gilmore on Partnership, p. 262.)
In some states the rigor of this common-law rule has been relaxed by statutes, which declare the obligations of copartners to be several as well as joint. But in this state the common-law rule has been expressly enacted by section 2442 of the Civil Code, which declares the liability of copartners to be joint, and we have no provision permitting several judgments to be recovered in several actions upon a joint obligation. The extent to which the common-law rule on this subject has been changed by the provisions of section 414 and section
The defendants' demurrer to the complaint raised this point, and in overruling it we are of the opinion that the court erred. The judgment is, therefore, reversed, with instructions to the trial court to sustain the demurrer to the complaint.
Waste, P. J., and Richards, J., concurred. *586