34 Ga. App. 496 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1925
M. P. Pope brought suit against A. H. Jennings and L. 0. Fortson “as a partnership formerly doing business under the partnership name of L. 0. Fortson,” and prayed judgment against the partnership and the said individual members thereof. The petition alleges, that the partnership was formed about the 15th of August, 1919, and that “the said partnership, on or about the 4th day of June, 1920, entered into a written contract with petitioner for the erection and equipment of a building” in which to conduct the partnership business, and “under the terms of said contract the said partnership agreed with your petitioner to rent said building when completed and ready for occupancy;” and that the partnership and the individual members thereof are now indebted to petitioner for rent of said building, for which judgment is asked. The rent contract is attached to the petition as an exhibit. In an amendment to the petition the plaintiff alleges, “that at the time the contract referred to in the preceding paragraph ,was entered into and executed between petitioner and the defendant partnership, petitioner had no knowledge of the existence of said partnership of A. H. Jennings and L. 0. Fortson, doing business as L. 0. Fortson, nor of the fact that A. H. Jennings was a member of said partnership.” Upon the allowance of this amendment Jennings moved to dismiss the petition as to the partnership and as to Jennings individually. The court granted the motion, stating in the order “that no cause of action is set forth against said partnership or against said defendant A. H. Jennings.” To this order and judgment the plaintiff excepted.
The rent contract is signed by “L. 0. Fortson (L. S.).” No reference is made either in the signature to the contract or in the contents of the contract to any partnership or to the defendant Jennings. On the contrary, the contract specifically states that it is made “by and between M. P. Pope of said State and county, party of the first part, and L. 0. Fortson, of said State and county, party of the second part;” and all reference to the party of the second part in the contract is with the personal pronouns “he,”
“If a contract be made with one in his individual right, and on his own security, such person is alone liable on that contract, although a partnership existed that [received] the entire benefit of the contract of which such contracting party was a member.” Floyd v. Wallace, 31 Ga. 688 (5). Properly characterized, the action in the present case was founded upon the contract, a copy of which was attached to the petition; and the contract, rightly construed, was that of a member of the alleged partnership, and not of the partnership itself. “An action is not’ maintainable against a partnership upon the individual contract of a member thereof, although he therein binds himself to pay to the other party to such contract a specified proportion of the net profits of the partnership during a stated period.” Wood v. Martin, 115 Ga. 147 (41 S. E. 490). The case last cited is identical in principle with the one under consideration. In that case Martin sued Wood and Edwards, alleging that they did business as a partnership under the name and style of B. H. Edwards. Wood demurred to the petition, on the ground that it set forth no cause of action against him, but showed on its face that, it was a suit against Edwards on his individual contract; and on appeal the Supreme Court so held. The contract was signed by “B. II. Edwards (L. S.),” and it began by reciting that the contract was made between Martin and Edwards. All reference in the body of the contract was to Edwards individually, except one reference to “the business of the firm of said Edwards;” and in regard to this reference the court said: “The use of the word ‘firm,’ in this connection and in this isolated instance, we do not think is sufficient to indicate that this is not the contract of Edwards individually, but is the contract of some undisclosed firm in which he was a partner. It would be very singular, indeed, if a written instrument of the length of the one under consideration, setting forth a contract between a lender and a borrower of money, were intended by the parties thereto to be a contract between the lender on the one side
The record does not show that Eortson signed the rent contract as agent for any one; but even if this were true, an undisclosed principal would not be liable, since the contract was under seal. Lenney v. Finley, 118 Ga. 718 (45 S. E. 593).
Judgment affirmed.