Opinion op the Court by
Beversing.
Alleging that the defendants, J. W. Willhoite, Otho Willhoite, L. Y. Willhoite and Orvie Willhoite, were partners engaged in raising and selling tobacco, and that during the year 1912 they had sold a certain quantity of tobacco at the Kentucky Tobacco Warehouse at Louisville, Kentucky, upon which certain reclamations had been allowed, and that he had paid these reclamations under a contract with the defendants by which they had agreed to reimburse him, plaintiff, B. L. Bobertson, brought this action against the defendants for the sum so paid. At the conclusion of plaintiff’s evidence the court directed a verdict in favor of the defendants. Plaintiff appeals.
It appears from the evidence of the plaintiff that he was a solicitor for the Kentucky Tobacco Warehouse, one of the warehouses owned and controlled by the Louisville Tobacco Warehouse Company. All tobacco shipped to the warehouse is.prized in hogsheads. Before tobacco is sold it is inspected and sampled by inspectors appointed for that purpose. The methodof inspection is to select several hands of tobacco which are used and displayed as samples of the tobacco contained in the hogshead from which it is taken. When the tobacco in a hogshead is guaranteed by some one known to the inspectors or buyers to be of the same grade, quality and condition as the samples, the tobacco usually sells for better .prices than if such guar
It is first insisted by defendants that the court properly gave a peremptory in their favor because there was no proof of partnership. Plaintiff, however, testified that each of the defendants had stated to him that they, were partners in the tobacco in question, and that one of them had made this statement in the presence of all the others. This was sufficient proof of partnership to take the case to the jury.
Another ground relied on to sustain the peremptory is that the contract was within the statute of frauds, providing that no action shall be brought to charge any person upon a promise to answer for the debt, default or misdoing of another unless the promise, contract, agreement, representation, assurance or ratification, or some memorandum or note thereof, be in writing and signed by the party to be charged therewith or his authorized agent. Kentucky Statutes, section 470, sub-sections 4,
Lastly, it is insisted that the directed verdict was proper because there was some evidence tending to show that defendant notified plaintiff not to pay the reclamations. Even if this be true, it did not absolve defendants from their liability to plaintiff. He had theretofore made the guarantee and incurred the obligation to pay the reclamations on the faith of the promise of the defendants to reimburse him. It was his right and duty as an honorable business man to keep his guarantee good. At the time of the notice the liability of the defendants had also been .incurred. Manifestly they could not avoid their obligations by merely notifying plaintiff not to pay the reclamation losses which he in good faith had agreed to pay.
The real issue in this.case are: Were the defendants partners, did the plaintiff guarantee the tobacco and pay the reclamations, and did defendants agree to reimburse him for the sum so paid? If they did, they are liable, and upon all these issues there was sufficient evidence to take the case to the jury. It follows that the trial court erred in awarding- defendants a peremptory instruction.
Judgment reversed and' cause remanded for new trial consistent with this opinion.
