116 F. 20 | 8th Cir. | 1902
This was a suit by M. E. Smith & Co., a mercantile corporation, against Martin Neal and William W. Cushman, as copartners, trading under the firm name of the Charter Oak Mercantile Company, on an open account for about $2,600, being the alleged value of goods which were sold by the plaintiff corporation to the defendant firm. The defendant Martin Neal sued out a writ of error to reverse the judgment which was recovered against him in the lower court. The defense which Neal made was that he retired from the aforesaid firm in the month of March, 1898; that notice was given to all persons with whom that firm had previously dealt of his retirement; that such notice was given to the plaintiff company; and that the goods sued for were sold after his retirement from the firm. The lower court withdrew the case from the jury, holding that there was not sufficient evidence to warrant a finding that a notice of Neal’s withdrawal from the firm had been given to the plaintiff company before the goods were sold. There was testimony introduced at the trial which tended to show that on April 9, 1898, one of the plaintiff’s traveling salesmen by the name of Tracey called at the place of business of the Charter Oak Mercantile Company at Charter Oak, Iowa, and solicited Cushman to order some goods; that in the course of this interview Cushman said that he had been buying most of his goods in Chicago; that if you (Tracey) can do as well by me as they do I probably might give you an order; and that he had “bought Mr. Neal out now,” and was running on his “own hook.” The testimony to this effect was given by the defendant Neal, who claimed to have been standing by, and to' have overheard the conversation between Tracey and Cushman. The other defendant, Cushman, testified that in August, 1898, he was in the city of Omaha, where the plaintiff company did business; that Tracey took him into the plaintiff’s place of business, and introduced him to a Mr. Burgess, who was the plaintiff’s credit manager, as “Mr. Cushman, of Charter Oak, the ‘whole cheese,’ he said, of the Charter Oak Mercantile Company.” The goods, as it seems, on account of which the suit was brought, were sold at various times subsequent to May 27, 1898. The sole question which arises upon the record is whether this evidence necessitated the submission of the case to the jury to determine whether Smith & Co. had received notice, prior to the sale of the goods, of Neal’s withdrawal from the firm.
Under these circumstances, the point to be determined is whether the notice given to Tracey, assuming that it was so' given, or that a jury would have so found, was notice to the plaintiff company, since there is no substantial evidence that notice of the alleged withdrawal was otherwise communicated to it. The statement, if it was made, that Cushman was the “whole cheese,” cannot be accepted as a proper or sufficient notice of the dissolution of the firm. It might mean that or something else.' And the question whether notice given to Tracey was adequate to bind the company depends, necessarily, upon the scope of his agency. The testimony on this latter point was to the following effect: That Tracey was simply a traveling salesman of the plaintiff company; that his duties were to sell goods or solicit orders; that after taking an order it had to be submitted to his employer for its acceptance or rejection; and that he had no other duties than these, or authority to make arrangements binding upon the company.
When a person retires from a firm with which he has been connected, it is his duty to advise all persons with whom the firm has previously had dealings that he has SO' withdrawn, if he would absolve himself from liability for credit subsequently extended by such persons to the firm from which he has retired. The law casts this burden on the retiring member, and where the firm name remains unchanged it does not compel those who have previously dealt with it to ascertain, each time that credit is extended, whether the membership thereof remains the same as before. In the absence of a notice to the contrary, they may assume that it does. This doctrine is elementary. Bloch v. Price (C. C.) 32 Fed. 562, 564, 565; Carmichael v. Greer, 55 Ga. 116. The usual practice among merchants is to mail written or printed notices to those with whom the firm has previously had dealings when any changes occur in the personnel of the firm, and those who have dealt with it may reasonably expect such a notice or a notice in some other form1 which is equally authentic. In this instance, therefore, as the plaintiff company had had dealings with the Charter Oak Mercantile Company, prior to March, 1898, the burden rested on Neal to show affirmatively that he had advised the plaintiff company of his withdrawal from the mercantile company. We are of opinion that the notice said to have been given by Cushman to Tracey was inadequate, and not binding upon the plaintiff, because Tracey’s sole duty, as the evidence shows, was to take orders and submit them to his employer for acceptance or rejection, while he had
For these reasons the judgment below is affirmed.