3 Ga. App. 752 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1908
Michael Brothers Company brought suit on an open account, in the city court of Dublin, against Davidson & Coleman, a firm composed of A. W. Davidson and H. C. Coleman Jr. The defendants filed an answer in which they set up, as a defense, that there was never any such firm as Davidson & Coleman, composed of A. W. Davidson and H. C. Coleman Jr., or either of them, and that neither of them ever did business under such firm name; but that A. W. Davidson and H. C. Coleman Jr. were stockholders of a corporation under the laws of Georgia, and, as such, bought the goods from the plaintiffs, and the credit was extended by the plaintiffs to the corporation, and not to Davidson & Coleman as a partnership. The jury found a verdict for the defendants; and the plaintiffs made a motion for a new trial, based upon the general grounds and several special grounds, which was overruled, and.the plaintiffs except.
The evidence foy the plaintiffs is as follows: The plaintiffs, through an agent, sold the bill of goods, the consideration of the account sued, to the defendants at their place of business in Dublin, on June 26, 1905. The goods were, in accordance with the order of the purchasers, shipped to them immediately. The defendants, at the date of the sale, were doing business under the firm name of Davidson & Coleman. When the goods were sold,,
There is no material conflict in the evidence ;■ and under it a verdict should have been found in favor of the plaintiffs. It is clearly shown that at the time the goods were sold to the defendants they were holding themselves out to the public as doing business in the firm name of Davidson & Coleman; that they bought the goods in that name, and credit was extended to them as a firm. Under their own testimony the defendants were, in law, partners, however they may have regarded their relation. They owned all the assets, shared equally 'in losses and profits, and paid expenses out of the business. There was no charter granted at the date of the purchase, and none granted until a month afterwards. There is no evidence that the goods were sold or credit given to a proposed or intended corporation. A corporation is not a person, in law, until after the grant of its charter (Bartram v. Collins Mfg. Co., 69 Ga. 751); and after a charter is granted, it has no authority to transact business until legal organization. Without charter and organization, “it could do no corporate act, could receive no corporate property, could incur no corporate liability, and against it no corporate judgment could be legally rendered.” Rau v. Union Paper Mill Co., 95 Ga. 212 (22 S. E. 146). The utmost that can be claimed for the defendants is that they had an understanding between themselves that, while they were in fact doing business as partners, they intended to incorporate the business, and that they did, subsequently to the purchase of the goods as partners, become a corporation. This understanding or intention was unknown to the plaintiffs, and could not bind them. Civil Code, §2650. “When parties hold themselves out to the public as doing a particular business in a firm name, the law will imply a partnership agreement as to third persons who contract with them in that firm name, whatever may be the real nature of their connection as between themselves.” Barnett v. Blackman, 53 Ga. 98.
But even if the intention t.o incorporate had been known to the plaintiffs, it would not affect their rights against the partnership
Some of the special exceptions are meritorious; but the general exception that this verdict is without evidence to support it is so full of merit that we content ourselves with reversing the judgment refusing a new trial on that ground. Judgment reversed.