62 Wis. 167 | Wis. | 1885
From the repeated decisions of this court we must hold that the assignment was made by the firm of J. T. Hicks & Co., and transferred to the assignee the prop
In view of the issues, we do not think there was any abuse of discretion in not allowing the defendant’s counsel to further cross-examine the plaintiff’s witness, J. T. Ilicks, as to the filling of the writing in the blanks in the receipts in the receipt-book kept by his firm. It is said to contain ninety-nine different receipts, but neither the book nor such receipts had been offered in evidence. The witness had already been recross-examined in relation to substantially all the receipts he had specifically testified about upon his redirect examination. Counsel suggested no material object to be attained by such further cross-examination. The witness had testified to the existence of the partnership as a matter of fact. ITis reference to receipts given by some of the attaching creditors was obviously to show that they knew the fact of partnership. There is nothing to indicate that the further cross-examination proposed was in relation to such receipts. All other receipts had but a remote bearing at most. Possibly they might have indicated a course of dealing from which the non-existence of the partnership might have been inferred. But that was a matter purely defensive. Being purely defensive, it was discretionary with the court
One of the alleged partners, Robert Ilicks, was sworn in behalf of the plaintiff. On cross-examination he had testified, in effect, that he supposed there were some judgments against him, but did not know — never examined; did not know there was between July and May, 1871. ITe was then asked, in effect, if there were not four several judgments described against him, and still unpaid. The question was excluded as immaterial and not proper cross-examination, and this is assigned as error. In support of this contention, it is urged that the testimony sought to be elicited would have tended to disprove the existence of the partnership, or, falling in that, it would tend to prove that the existence of the partnership was kept secret, with the view of defrauding persons dealing with J. T. Hicks, the ostensible owner of the business. We are unable to discover how such testimony could have any bearing upon either proposition. Certainly, it had no bearing upon the question of the existence of the partnership. Since partnership property must be applied to the payment of partnership debts, to the exclusion of the creditors of the individual members of the firm, and the creditors of the latter are first to be paid out of the separate effects of their debtor, before the partnership creditors are entitled to anything from individual assets (Lord v. Devendorf, 54 Wis. 495), and since the goods here purchased of the attaching creditors were claimed by the plaintiff to Rave been so purchased by J. T. Hicks for the firm, it is difficult to see how such attaching creditors could be defrauded or injured by the existence of the firm, or the fact that the other member of the firm owed individual debts. Such attaching creditors not only had their remedy against the firm assets, but, upon exhausting them, against J. T. Hicks, the same as though there had been no firm. The
The defendant sought to prove by Mr. Wood, the “ credit man ” of one of the attaching creditors, in effect, that he instructed their traveling man, Harris, not to solicit any trade from Robert Hicks, nor any firm of which he was a member. Such instruction clearly had no bearing upon the question of partnership, nor as to whether such creditors had, in fact, sold the goods to the firm or to J. T. Hicks personally, nor any other issue involved in the case. The court very properly excluded the question. The same is true with.respect to the question put by the defendant’s counsel to his witness, Harris, as to inquiries made by him of his house in relation to giving credit to Hicks.
Erom a careful examination of the record we are clearly of the opinion that the verdict was sustained by the evidence, and hence the motion to set it aside as contrary to the evidence was properly overruled.
The counsel for the defendant has taken exceptions to two specific portions of the charge, on the ground that, although they were both correct, “ as abstract propositions of law,” yet that “ there was no testimony whatever in this case on which to found either of them,” and hence that they misled the jury. It is enough to say that we agree with counsel that each of the propositions of law referred to was, in the
Error is assigned because the court refused to give the following instruction requested: “If J. T. Hicks falsely represented himself to be doing business in his own name, for the purpose of purchasing and obtaining goods on credit for the firm of J. T. Hicks & Co., and by so doing did so purchase and obtain goods for the firm of J. T. Hicks & Co., which the latter could not have purchased and obtained upon their own credit, then J. T. Hicks & Co. did not obtain a valid title to the goods so purchased and obtained.” We are not aware of any case, and none have been cited, where a person ostensibly doing business in his own name, but having a dormant partner, has been held to have committed a fraud in purchasing goods for such business, merely because he did not, in fact, disclose the partnership. As already shown in another part of this opinion, no injury could result from such want of knowledge to one selling goods for such business to such ostensible proprietor. Had J. T. Hicks purchased the goods for himself, personally, and retained them as his own, on the representations that he was the sole owner of the business carried on, then a different question would have been presented. A fraud may be committed on the creditors of an insolvent firm by a known partner secretly retiring or withdrawing from the firm. 1 Lindl. Partn. 735, 736. But that proposition is the direct antipode to the one here presented. Here the jury found that the partnership existed. This being so, Robert was, necessarily, either known to be such partner, or else it was a secret with the partners. In either event, they could make an assignment binding upon those who had sold goods for the business, even though the negotiations were with a single member of the firm. The whole question seems to have been fully and fairly submitted to the jury. The court charged them, among other
By the Court.— The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.