95 Ky. 309 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1894
delivered the opinion oe the court.
J. B. Wilgus and W. E. and E. K. Cropper composed a firm of patrners engaged in the tobacco business in the city of Lexington, Ky., under the firm name of Cropper & ■Co. During the existence of the firm, W. E. and E. K. Cropper signed their names to six promissory notes to the appellant for moil ey loaned for the use of the firm, and which was used by the firm in its business. J. B. Wilgus having ■died, and the firm having become insolvent, and the notes not having been paid, the appellant presented the notes to the estate of J. B. Wilgus for payment. The representatives of said estate refused payment of the notes upon the ground that, as they were signed by W. E. and E. K. Cropper in their individual uames, and not in the firm name of Cropper & Co., J. B. Wilgus, a member of the firm, was not bound for the payment of the notes, nor upon an implied assumpsit for the money so loaned.
It appears, without contradiction, that. J. B. Wilgus at’ the time of the loans was a director in the appellant; that he told the appellant that his firm needed the loan of some money, and requested the appellant to let the firm have it. But, inasmuch as he was one of the directors of the appellant, he did not wish his name to appear on the paper, and for that reason to let the paper appear, in the names W. E. and E. K. Cropper; that the money was loaned to the firm for its use, and the notes taken under
The question is,' when a note is signed hy one partner in his individual name, which is not the firm’s usual name, for borrowed money to be used for the benefit of the firm, and at the request and consent of the other partner, is the partnership bound on the note for its payment? As this, court has settled that question to its own satisfaction, it is needless to go outside to look for precedent.
In the case of Carter v. Mitchell, 94 Ky., 261, the cases by this court upon the question at issue are reviewed and a rule established which governs this case.
It is held in that case that the doctrine announced in the case of Hikes v. Crawford & Long, 4 Bush, 19, to the effect that when a note had been executed for borrowed money hy one member of the firm in his own name, and which was not the firm’s name, and the money was used for the benefit of the firm, the firm was liable on the note for its payment, was no longer the law in this State. It was also held in that case that when a note was executed by one member of a firm in his individual name, which was not the firm’s name, for the benefit of the firm, by the consent of the other member, such consent, made the note the firm’s note, and it was bound for its payment. It se’ems in such case that the consent of the member not signing that the other member may sign the note for the benefit of the firm, is equivalent to making that member’s name the firm’s name for that particular transaction, and the case of Macklin’s Ex’or v. Crutcher, 6 Bush, 401, is construed to bo in harmony with this view. It is clear that
These facts certainly made the notes firm notes and bound Wilgus for their payment. But it is said that Wilgus refused to sign the notes, which shows that he did not intend to be bound thereon, and that the bank so understood it. But we think the facts relative to that matter are in favor of his liability on the notes, because he asked the bank to loan the money to W. E. and E. N. Cropper for the benefit of the firm, and gave as his reason for not getting the money in the name of Cropper & Co., that, being a director in the bank he did not wish to appear as obligor on the notes. This fact, we think, emphasizes the conclusion reached that Wilgus authorized the use of the names W. E. and E. K. Cropper as representing the firm’s name. Also, the fact that the firm’s tobacco was pledged to secure the payment of the notes with the knowledge and consent of Wilgus, is another fact showing that he intended said names to represent that of the firm. Borne of said notes were renewed in the lifetime of Wilgus, in the name of the same payors. This fact does not militate in favor of Wilgus, because as the names of the Croppers were intended to represent the name of the firm m the matter of borrowing mono}’ from the bank, the renewals of the notes were only evidences of the same transaction, and bound Wilgus for their payment. Conceding that the Croppers had no right to renew one of the notes after the death of Wilgus, the bank did not release Wilgus from the payment of the original note which he was bound on unless the bank -had intended to
The judgment is reversed and the case is remanded, with directions to give appellant judgment 'on the notes sued on, except the one executed after the death of Wilgus, and to render judgment- in that case on the original note against Wilgus’ representatives.