210 A.D. 739 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1924
Each of the eight actions here on appeal is for goods sold and delivered. The complaint alleges that Joseph L. Cahn, Louis Margolies and Samuel Meadow were all copartners doing business as Joseph L. Cahn & Company. There is no dispute about the sale and delivery and non-payment of the merchandise. The partnership of the respondents Margolies and Meadow is alone contested. They deny that they are partners of Joseph L. Cahn & Company, and the plaintiff asserts that they were partners at the time of the sale and delivery of the goods.
The trial court dismissed the complaint.
The appellant’s grievance is that the testimony of defendant Cahn, who became a witness for the plaintiff, showed a partnership such as would make the defendants liable to creditors. It asserts that the partnership arrangement was supported by circumstances
The plaintiff’s case hinged heavily on the credibility of the witness Cahn. Some surrounding circumstances corroborate Cahn’s version of the parties’ relation. Between November, 1920, and up to March, 1921, defendant Margolies contributed cash and merchandise to the business of Joseph L. Cahn & Company amounting to $40,000, and during these four months when cash and merchandise was delivered, no checks or notes were given for these contributions to the capital of Cahn’s concern. During this period the current obligations of Cahn were not met and he was under heavy obligations. In April, 1921, there was a change in the conduct of Margolies in relation to this business. He then requested notes of Cahn for the cash and merchandise that was contributed to the business saying that he was short and he wished to keep the transactions secret from his bookkeepers, and likewise Meadow, the other defendant, immediately thereafter requested notes for the cash and merchandise that he contributed, saying he was in need of his money and that he would thereafter furnish Cahn with the money with which to take up these notes, such notes merely to be taken as evidence of capital invested in the partnership and not to be used. Cahn swore that it was agreed that the money invested by both Margolies and Meadow was to be paid out of profits, and that no profits were to be distributed until the capital put in by these two defendants had been first paid. On the other hand, there are numerous indications from which it might be inferred that these defendants were not partners of Cahn, but were merely sellers of merchandise and lenders of cash to Cahn’s enterprise. There were thirty notes given by Cahn for the moneys advanced. There were forty-one bills for the merchandise contributed. There were twelve statements made to creditors in which he (Cahn) asserted his ownership of the business alone. . His schedules in bankruptcy and the adjudication in bankruptcy all indicate a failure on the part of Cahn to make any claim of a partnership existing” between himself and these defendants. He also gave testimony in an action in the City Court between one Brinn and Meadow that his transactions with respondent Meadow were debtor and creditor transactions in speaking of the sales notes, adjustment of accounts, bills for goods and payments thereon, whose effect is in controversy here. He also filed a certificate in the county clerk’s office during the period he claimed .these persons were partners, to the effect that
The judgment should be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to the appellants to abide event.
Clarke, P. J., Dowling, Finch and Martin, JJ., concur.
Judgment reversed and new trial ordered, with costs to appellants to abide the event.