111 Ga. 73 | Ga. | 1900
Page brought suit against Ashburn, Peacock, Edwards, Lietch, Williams, Rogers, and the Citizens Banking Company of Eatonton, which was alleged to be a partnership composed of the five persons first above named. The petition contained three counts, one for malicious prosecution, one for malicious arrest, and one for false imprisonment. The facts alleged in each of the counts were, in substance, as follows: Rogers was. the sheriff of the county, and as such had levied a mortgage exe
At the time fixed for the preliminary trial, Rogers, Lietch, Edwards, and Williams, acting for themselves and with the approval of Ashburn and Peacock, the other members of the partnership, again appeared with their attorney before the magistrate for the purpose of prosecuting petitioner, and on their motion the case was again continued until the following day, over the objection of petitioner, who was present and demanding a hearing. At the time fixed in this last order of postponement, petitioner appeared with his coun'sel before the magistrate, and thereupon the prosecution, by their attorney, asked leave of the court to withdraw the warrant and to restore to petitioner the articles which had been seized by the officer who searched his house; the attorney representing the prosecution stating that it was impossible to make out a case. An order was then granted, discharging petitioner from custody, and restoring to him the articles which had been seized. It was distinctly alleged that while Rogers and Lietch, the persons upon whose affidavit the warrant was issued, were the nominal prosecutors of petitioner, Ashburn, Edwards, Williams, and Peacock, and the Citizens Banking Company as a partnership, were all jointly and severally the prosecutors in the case. Petitioner alleges that he was innocent of any offense, and that he did not take and carry away any of the articles named in the affidavit, nor were any of them concealed in his dwelling or about his premises, and that the prosecutors had no probable cause whatever to believe that the same were so concealed ; that the articles seized by the officer constituted no part of the property mentioned in the af
To this petition the defendants filed demurrers, both general and special. The court sustained the demurrers and dismissed the petition, and this ruling is assigned as error. The plaintiff, during the progress of the hearing of the demurrers, offered an amendment to his petition, which merely set forth with greater particularity than the original petition the facts showing the connection of the Citizens Banking Company with the mortgage execution which had been levied upon the property of petitioner, apd prayed that, if it should be held that the suit could not be maintained against the Citizens Banking Company as a partnership, the case might be held in court as a suit against Rogers and the individual members of that partnership. The court refused to allow this amendment, and this ruling is also assigned as error.
A. corporation is a person, and therefore it is clear that the decisions uniformly holding that it may be rendered liable for a tort committed by its agent are. undoubtedly sound. “ Though a firm or partnership is not a person, it is a legal entity, and, for some purposes, is recognized as a quasi person having powers and functions exercisible by one of the partners severally or all of them jointly.” Drucker v. Wellhouse, 82 Ga. 129. In the opinion in the case just cited Mr. Chief Justice Bleckley says: A firm adds nothing to population, and in this respect is unlike a corporation, which augments population in the legal, though not in the natural world. Still, the law does take note, on a wide scale, of partnership as a legal entity, and regards it as á unit both of rights and obligations. Judgment may be entered and execution issue for or against it. Code, §§1899,3576. [Civil Code, §§ 2638, 5346.] Attachment may issue against it as non-resident, Chambers vs. Sloan, 19 Ga. 84; DeLeon vs. Heller, 77 Ga. 740; or as absconding, Hines vs. Kimball & Co., 47 Ga. 587. It may be served with process, Peel vs. Bryson, 72 Ga. 332. It may be taxed, The Mayor vs. Hines, 53 Ga. 616; and see many provisions in the session laws imposing taxes. It may be insolvent, Code, § 1918 [Civil Code, §2660]; Bennett vs. Woolfolk, 15 Ga. 213; Daniel vs. Townsend, 21 Ga. 155; Pullen vs. Whitfield, 55 Ga. 174; Anderson vs. Pollard, 62 Ga. 51. It may assign its property to pay its creditors, but whether by general law a single partner can make for it a general assignment seems open to question. Bur. on Ass. §67 et seq.-, Story Par. §§101, 310; Parsons Par. 165, 166, 400. As to restrictions on limited partnerships in the matter of assignments, see Code, §§ 1939, 1940 [Civil Code,
It has been held that if one partner maliciously prosecutes a person for stealing partnership property, the firm is not answerable, unless all the members are in fact privy to the malicious prosecution. Arbuckle v. Taylor, 3 Dowl. 160, cited in Newell on Malicious Prosecution, § 103. It would seem to follow from this ruling, that if all of the members united in instituting and carrying on the prosecution, the firm would be answerable; and such are the allegations in the present case. In nearly all of the cases where it is sought to hold the partnership liable for a
While the decision in the case of Ozborn v. Woolworth, 106 Ga. 459, is apparently in conflict with what is now ruled, upon a close examination of that case it will be found that it was upon its facts correctly decided, and when it is thus confined it is not only not in conflict with the present ruling but is > rather in line therewith. In that case it was sought to hold a partnership liable for slanderous words uttered by one of the partners, upon two grounds: first, because the words-were uttered in a transaction within the scope of the partnership business ; and second, that the other partner after the slanderous words were uttered had ratified the same. It was properly held that the partnership was not liable upon either ground. If a corporation is not liable for a slander uttered by its agent, although in a transaction within the scope of his agency, unless the corporation directed the speaking of the very words complained of, as was held in Behre v. National Cash Register Com
7. The warrant upon which the accused was arrested was neither defective nor void. The affidavit complied with the law which declares that a search warrant shall not issue except upon probable cause, supported by oath, particularly describing the place or places to be searched and the person or things to be seized. Penal Code, §1243 et seq. Such being the case, the imprisonment resulting from an arrest under a warrant thus issued was not a false imprisonment. In Joiner v. Ocean Steamship Company, 86 Ga. 238, it was held that “ where a warrant is regularly and properly sued out, and the prisoner has been projjerly and legally arrested under it, the imprisonment can not be false.” In the opinion Mr. Justice Blandford
Judgment reversed, with direction.