53 Miss. 280 | Miss. | 1876
delivered the opinion of the court.
Passing by the refusal of the court to quash the summons, and the denial of a continuance, as to both of which, we think, the court did right, we proceed to examine more important questions. This is an action on two promissory notes, signed “ D. B. McKee & Co.,” dated “ Boston, Mass., Aug. 23,1875,” and payable, respectively, four and five months after date. The action is against D. B. McKee and W. H. Maxey, as makers of said notes. Both pleaded non est factum, or the equivalent plea appropriate to the action. On the trial of the issue upon this plea the plaintiffs offered in evidence the notes sued on, and, having read them to the jury, called the defendant Maxey as a witness, and proved by him that, prior to May 1, 1875, there was, doing mercantile business at Jackson, Tenn., a firm under the name and style of “D. B. McKee & Co.,” composed of the defendants to this action and J. S. Chiles; that said partnership was dissolved on the 1st of May, 1875, and Chiles agreed to assume all liabilities of said firm, and was empowered to wind up the business of said partnership ; that witness did not execute said notes, and knew nothing of them until presented to him after they were due ; that he was not aware that the firm of D. B. McKee & Co. was indebted to the plaintiffs; and that the signatures to the notes were in the handwriting of Chiles. This is the substance of the testimony of Maxey, and the plaintiffs’ counsel then asked
We might content ourselves with what has been said, but cannot forbear to say that, both upon principle and the decided weight of American authority, after dissolution of the partnership, the power of one of the members to make admissions about transactions of the partnership to affect any but himself is at an end. Story on Partnership, §§ 828, 324, and notes; Parsons on Partnership, 191, note p. The objection to the evidence should have been sustained.
D. B. McKee was introduced by the plaintiffs as a witness, and produced a written agreement between him and Chiles, by which it was stipulated between them that the style of the firm should remain the same as before, until Nov. 1, 1875. Whatever effect this contract had as to McKee, it is not shown that Maxey was a party to such contract; and without authorization from the former partners, or some act of theirs from which the law would imply authority in Chiles to execute notes in the partnership name for the indebtedness of the partnership incurred before the dissolution, such notes are not obligatory on the other members of the late partnership. Dissolution puts an end to the power of any of the members of the partnership to execute a note in the partnership name for a partnership debt, so as to bind the other members of the partnership ; and this being true, a fortiori cannot the mere declaration of one partner after dissolution about partnership transactions affect others.
The action of the court below in its admission of evidence,
Judgment reversed.