3 Rawle 251 | Pa. | 1832
The opinion of the court was delivered by
On the trial of this cause, it appeared in evidence, that MCready and Wood had been the owners of, and held as tenants in common, a lot of land at Morristown in Montgomery county, through which a canal dr race had been made to conduct the water from the Schuylkill river, and was used by them for manufacturing purposes. On the 30th of January, 1826, a partition by deed of that date was made and executed between them, and among other things in it, the following clause is contained: “ They, the said Samuel R. “ Wood and Bernard MCready agree, that they, their heirs and “ assigns, at their equal and joint expense, shall cause the canal or “ race through their respective lots from the dam to De Kalb street, “ to be widened so as to take in one half of the- river Schuylkill, “ when the w'ater is at its lowest stage, and to be walled from the “ bottom to the height of six inches above the level of the water in “ the dam; which race and the head gates shall at all times forever “ be kept in order at the equal and joint expense of Samuel R. Wood “ and Bernard MCready,” &c.
There was evidence given on the part of M'Cready, that he had employed and paid hands for walling and doing the work mentioned in the deed of partition on that part of the race opposite-to his mill and allotment in the partition that was made, the amount of which was sixteen or seventeen hundred dollars. It was attempted on the part of the plaintiff below to rebut the effect of this last evidence by showing that he had done work for M'Cready in building or assisting to build a factory for him, and that in a suit brought by Freedly against M'Cready for this last work mentioned, he (M'Cready) claimed asa set-off this, sixteen or seventeen hundred dollars, which he had paid for work, done at his part of the race, because that Freedly by a contract in writing made with M'Cready and Wood jointly, in 1825, had undertaken to do all that same work in a particular manner, and had been paid for doing it, but failed to finish the work in the manner he 'had undertaken and agreed to do.
The court below in their charge to the jury, told them, that the covenant or agreement between Wood and M'Cready contained in their deed of partition, and which has been recited, taken in connexion with the fact of the work being done by Freedly, was some evidence of an agreement on the part of Wood and M'Cready with the plaintiff below, to do the work for which this suit was brought. This part of the charge is the ground of the first error, which has been assigned.
This covenant or agreement between Wood and M'Cready is not in the nature of a partnership agreement, which gives each and every of the partners full power and authority to make contracts in the name and on behalf of all, and to bind all where the contracts are made for the purpose of promoting the end and design of the partnership. After such a contract is made by one partner, all are bound by it, and become liable for the fulfilment of it in whole, not each for his proportion, but each for the performance of the whole
The court, also, in their charge, told the jury, that Wood’s asking for a copy of the bill of the admeasurement of the work done by the plaintiff below, and saying that he wanted it for M'Cready; that he was equally interested with himself, might be taken by them as some evidence of a joint contract. In this, I think, the court was wrong. The declarations or admissions of Wood, without any authority either express or implied, being shown to have been given by M'Cready to Wood, to bind him, or to make a contract binding them jointly, were no evidence whatever of a joint contract, and were not admissible for the purpose of charging M'Cready, either singly or jointly. Beside, from the nature of the arrangement between Wood and M'Cready, and their accountability to each other, growing out of their covenant, jt was requisite that each should keep and preserve an account of
The court also directed the jury, that they might consider the circumstances of M'Cready’s'having been frequently at the place, and his having his agents there during the whole time the work was going on, and his saying nothing to Freedly to induce him to believe that he was to look to Wood alone for his pay, as some evidence of M'Cready’s liability. It appears to me, that the court below also erred in this matter; for unless the evidence in regard to this, had gone to show that MCready and his agents were there for the very purpose of superintending and directing the work that the plaintiff below was engaged in doing, no inference of M’Cready’s connexion with Freedly, or liability to pay him for the work, could be reasonably drawn; and why should M‘Creadij have told Freedly not to look to him for his pay, when it did not appear that he had reason to believe that Freedly intended to do so. Indeed, it did not appear that Freedly had any such idea of it himself, until afterwards, when he found that Wood, who contracted with' him, was unable to pay; for, in making the contract, M'Cready was not named as a party to it, nor was it said that he was to pay any thing. To produce a like bearing, the court also referred to the contract of 1825, which was one that had been reduced to writing, and signed by Wood and M-Cready, each, as one party, and by Freedly, as the second party to it. This, it is conceived, could and ought not to have had any weight whatever in determining the liability of M’Cready. It did not relate to the same labour for which the suit was brought, and if it showed any thing, it was, thal when M'Cready intended to make himself liable, he became a party to, and signed the contract, binding himself expressly to pay, in conjunction with Wood, for it. So that it might as well have been inferred from this, that when they intended to be bound, they both joined expressly in making the contract.
The last error-complained of, is, that part of the charge in which the court below, in observing upon the effect of evidence given on the part of the defendants below, going to prove that MCready had, at his own expense, walled the race opposite to his land, and from which, as M‘Cready’s counsel had contended, the jury might fairly infer, that Wood was not only left, but bound to do, at his own expense, what he had employed the plaintiff below to perform, told the jury, that as the same witness by whom M‘Cready made this proof, upon his cross-examination, said that in another action brought by the plaintiff below against MCready, to recovera claim which Freedly had against MCready, for work done,in building a factory for him; that MCready, on a trial of it before arbitrators, charged Freedly with this work, which he, MCready, had done at his own cost, in walling the race, &c. opposite to his own lot, and claimed a set-off for it, and that, if this set-off was allowed to MCready, no inference could be drawn in his favour from the evidence of that witness, and
The judgment of the court below is reversed, and a venire de novo awarded.