3 Ga. App. 247 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1907
Suit was brought by Brook & Company against the College Park Milling Company, on a note'signed in the firm name, and it is alleged that the milling company is a partnership composed of Mims and Hathcock. Mims filed a plea alleging that he was not a partner. It appears that in 1903 Mims and Hath-cock did business as partners, under the name College Park Milling Company. In 1904 Mims sold out his interest in the mill to Hathcock and the partnership was dissolved, Hathcock continuing the business under the name of College Park Milling Company. No publication of the dissolution was made. The evidence was doubtful as to whether the plaintiffs were creditors of the partnership, within the purview of the rule requiring actual notice, and was in sharp conflict as to whether they had actual notice of the dissolution. In 1904 and 1905 they sold corn to the milling company and took a note executed by Hathcock in the name of the milling company in settlement of the account, and this note was from time to time in like manner renewed. It was the contention of the plaintiffs that Mims, after the dissolution and at the time they were making the sales, told them that he was a. partner, .and afterwards expressly directed them to take the renewal notes .as they did; and this he as emphatically denied. Effort was made by the defendant to show that while publication of the dissolution
1. Where the plaintiff sues a number of defendants as partners, he may recover by showing either an actual partnership undissolved, or, as against one filing a plea of no partnership, an estoppel on his part to deny liability as a partner, either by reason of admissions acted on, by the prior existence of a partnership of the dissolution of which proper notice was not given, or by any other sufficient state of facts to create such an estoppel. Proof of a state of facts which will estop the defendant from denying that he was a partner is as effective, in support of a petition alleging a partnership, as proof that the partnership did actually exist. It is not required that the plaintiff should show, by the allegations of his petition, that he expects to hold the defendant as a partner by reason of an estoppel. Actually the ostensible or putative partner may not be a member of the partnership, but when he places himself in such a position that the law estops him from denying his connection with the firm, he is, in juridical contemplation, just as irrefragibly a partner as if he were actually so. Carmichael v. Greer, 55 Ga. 116; Sankey v. Columbus Iron Works, 44 Ga. 228; Slade v. Paschal, 67 Ga. 541; Carlton v. Grissom, 98 Ga. 118 (26 S. E. 77). The cases of Smith v. Ferrario, 113 Ga. 872 (39 S. E. 428), and Tuells v. Torras, 113 Ga. 691 (39 S. E. 455), cited by counsel as being to the contrary, are in fact not so.
2. An estoppel to deny partnership does not necessarily arise, however, from the fact that one has held 'himself out as a partner by admissions or otherwise. It must appear that the opposite
3. The court should have charged the jury, upon the defendant's timely written request therefor, that “admissions should be scanned with care.” This principle was applicable to the case. Civil Code, §5479; Ocean Steamship Co. v. McAlpin, 69 Ga. 438 (4).
4. There was no error in admitting the bill-heads showing the name of Mims as a partner. Tumlin v. Goldsmith, 40 Ga. 221.
5. -“The dissolution of a partnership by the retiring of an ostensible partner must be made known to creditors and to the world. The word 'creditors’ as thus employed in the statute (Civil Code, §2634), is not limited to persons- who were creditors at the time of the dissolution. Á person who had previously sold goods and given credit to the firm during its continuance was within its meaning. Actual notice must be given to creditors. As to the notice which must be given to the world, no inflexible rule can be laid down. Fair and reasonable publication in a public gazette, circulated in the locality in which the business of the partnership has been conducted, is generally sufficient; and any means of fairly publishing the fact of such dissolution as' widely as possible, in order to put the public on its guard, are proper to be considered on the question of such notice. General reputation of the dissolution, in a community where a person sought to be charged with notice resides, or in.the business community to which the parties belong, is admissible as tending to show notice. Such general reputation or notoriety is not itself notice, but is admissible for the consideration of the jury in determining whether there was notice. A witness can not state his mere conclusion that others than himself knew a fact.” Bush v. McCarty Co., 127 Ga. 308 (56 S. E. 430). As stated in the opinion in the case just cited, the burden of showing that the notice was received by the plaintiff is upon the defendant. See also Askew v. Silman, 95 Ga. 678 (22 S. E. 573).
6. The fact that the plaintiff’s bookkeeper knew that the partnership had been dissolved is prima facie inadmissible for the purpose of charging the plaintiff with such knowledge.
7. If the plaintiffs, with notice of a dissolution of the partner
Judgment reversed.