104 Ga. 323 | Ga. | 1898
Flannery & Company sued W. B. and O. G. Sparks-Jr., doing business under the firm name of W. B. & O. G. Sparks, upon an account for money advanced by the plaintiffs on cotton consigned to and sold by the plaintiffs on commission for account of defendants’ firm, such advances being made in payment of drafts drawn in the firm name. The transactions extended through a period beginning in September, 1892, and ending in February, 1894, and the accounts contained credits of amounts realized from time to time during that period from the sale of the cotton. The action was brought February 9, 1897. A defense was filed by W. B. Sparks, who set up therein that the transactions upon which the account was based were unauthorized by him, and were not within the legitimate scope of the partnership business of W. B. & O. G. Sparks, their business being that of cotton-factors, and being restricted by the contract of partnership to the sale of cotton on commission, the storage of cotton, and the making of advances thereon, and not including the consignment of cotton for sale for their own account; and that he knew nothing of the transactions in question until the suit was brought; also, that so much of the account as appeared therefrom to have been due on November 26, 1892, was barred by the statute of limitations. There was a verdict
It appearing in the present case that cotton-factors in Macon, Georgia, where the firm of W. B. & O. G. Sparks did business, were not accustomed to buy and sell cotton on their own account, and it further appearing that it was not the custom of this firm to do so, it follows that when O. G. Sparks placed with the plaintiffs in Savannah, Georgia, for sale on account of the firm, the cotton upon which the plaintiffs made thb advances and from which the losses which are the subject-matter of this suit resulted, these transactions were not within the scope of the partnership, as that was determined by the agreement between the parties, by the custom of the place where the partnership was located, and by the known habit of the partnership itself. If the firm had sold cotton to the plaintiffs and had bought cotton from them, even in their own name, then the partnership would have been bound by the transaction, because, under such circumstances, the plaintiffs would have had a right to presume that they were dealing with the firm as agents of an undisclosed principal, such being legitimately within the scope of this business; but as cotton-factors are mere agents and are not authorized to delegate authority to another agent, the moment that the plaintiffs entered into a contract with the firm to sell cotton on their account, they were put on notice that the firm was not dealing in behalf of a concealed principal, but were dealing in their own behalf, and therefore that the transaction in question was not within the scope of the partnership with which they were dealing. “ A factor is employed because trust and confidence are reposed in his ability and integrity, and the execution of this trust and confidence can not, in general, be delegated to .another.” Mechem on Ag. § 998, and cases cited. Story on Ag. § 34 a.
The books of the firm not being in evidence, it is to be presumed that the entries were of such a character that an examination would have disclosed the exact nature of the transactions, and that either partner examining the books could have seen that the partnership was engaging in a business outside of the scope of the business. While the transactions were known to O. G. Sparks, and he is not attempting to avoid liability on account of the same, it is claimed by W. B. Sparks that he was entirely ignorant of them until service was had upon him in this case, which was about three years after the transactions with . the plaintiffs had closed. When the plaintiffs proved that the transactions were entered upon the books of the firm, the burden was cast upon the defendant to show that the entries were not of such a character as that an examination of the same would have led to a discovery of the nature of the transactions in which O. G. Sparks was engaged. He having failed to do this, and a sufficient time having elapsed since the transaction began for him to have made an examination of the books in which they were entered, the jury were authorized to presume that W. B. Sparks knew of the transactions, and that his failure to repudiate them within a reasonable time amounted to a ratification of the same. The means of knowledge was at hand, and it was negligence to close his eyes to that which was staring him in the face. He can not sit silently by for a number of years, and only when loss has been sustained plead that he was ignorant of the nature of transactions out of which the loss arose. A state of facts was shown from which the law would presume knowledge, and therefore he will be required to pay the debts of the person whom he has held out to the world as his partner. This is not a case of one partner spying into the business of another
Judgment affirmed.