6 Pa. 492 | Pa. | 1847
It is admitted, that here was an attempted application by Power, one of the partners, of a debt due to the firm of which he was a member, in payment of his separate debt; and the jury-having,negatived the allegation of assent of the other partner, Lacock, to this appropriation, the principal question presented for decision is, whether an action at law can be sustained in the partnership name to recover- the debt sought to be- misapplied. On the authority of the English case of Jones v. Yeates, decided by the Court of King’s Bench, 9 Barn. & Cres. 532, the plaintiff in error contends the action will not lie: because, as it is said, there is no instance in which a person has been allowed as a plaintiff, in a court of law, to rescind his own act for his own benefit, on the ground that such act was a fraud on some other person, and this whether the party seeking to do so, sue in his own name only, or jointly with another. It is true it was so held in the case cited. Two suits were brought in the name of a firm: one
But, I conceive, it is not necessary, in the present instance, to assume the equitable ground, to found an answer to the objection made by the defendant below. This action does not proceed upon a suggestion of mala fides, or imputed fraud in one of the parties, but upon the foot of the original claim, springing from the debt contracted with the firm in the usual course of dealing; and, therefore, there is nothing standing in the way of the action which requiresto.be rescinded. The effort was to apply this debt, so due, in payment of the private debt of the assenting partner, by endorsing it as a credit on the bond held by the defendant below. But with us it is settled beyond controversy, that a partner has no power to bind his fellows by such a transaction without their knowledge and assent. The act is simply void. It does not operate to discharge the debt, or to change the relative liabilities of the parties. Nor is it permitted to interfere with the form of the action prescribed by the rule of law, as will be seen by consulting the cases. This doctrine was expressly recognised by our own
Little remains to be noticed. The error assigned in the first bill of exceptions was abandoned on,the argument; and no difficulty is felt in disposing of the second. The defendant called a witness residing in the neighbourhood of the parties, to prove he had never heard of a partnership between the plaintiffs. This was done to found an inference, that the defendant below was also ignorant of this connection. Was it not, then, competent to the plaintiffs to give room for a counter-inference, by showing that other neighbours had heard of their association ? .But I do not put the point on this ground. It could not affect the plaintiff’s right to recover, that the defendant below was aware of the existence of a- partnership at' the time he purchased the goods in question. There can be no pretence that Lacock was a dormant partner; and in the case of ostensible partners, the criterion, either for action or defence, is
.Judgment affirmed.