15 Ga. App. 334 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1914
The Southern Buralist Company brought a suit against the Champion Manufacturing Company, C. C. Brown, and T. C. Parker, upon two notes for $112 each, signed, “Champion Mnfg. Co., by C. C. Brown, Manager,” and dated December 26, 1911. The suit was defended only by T. C. Parker, who filed a plea of no-partnership, alleging that the partnership formerly existing between himself and Brown, under the name and style of Champion Manufacturing Company, was dissolved on November 20, 1911, and that the plaintiff, with full knowledge of the dissolution, accepted from C. C. Brown a payment of $112 upon the alleged indebtedness, and accepted the notes sued upon. Parker’s plea further alleged that at the time of the execution of the notes all business relations between himself and Brown had been discontinued, and that the dissolution of the partnership had been published to the world in accordance with the law. On the- trial it appeared, without contradiction, that the Champion Manufacturing Company contracted with the Southern Buralist Company to pay a stipulated price for a certain advertisement in four issues of the publication printed by the latter company; and there was evidence that an advertisement occupying the amount of space contracted for was inserted in four issues of the paper. It did not appear that the matter published was the same as that contained in the pro posed advertisement, but no other inference can be drawn than that the matter published was the same, or that exact compliance was waived; for it was not disputed that a statement of account, which included the sum charged for the advertisement, was sent to the Champion Manufacturing Company prior to the alleged dissolution, and that prior to the dissolution Mr. Brown, as manager, wrote a letter to the Southern Buralist Company, acknowledging the correctness of the account and promising to remit in settlement in a short time.
On December 26, 1911, Brown, as manager of the Champion Manufacturing Company, paid $112 in cash upon the account, and gave the two notes of $112 each which were the subject-matter of the suit. There can be no question that this was an acknowledgment of liability on the part of the Champion Manufacturing Company and Brown, and the only question to be determined was whether or not the Southern Buralist Company at that time knew or had received notice of the dissolution, so that its acceptance of