1. Where a sales agency contract is entered into between an electric company and two partners, and the company furnishes merchandise thereunder to the partners to be sold and the proceeds thereof remitted to it, and where the partnership is thereafter dissolved by the withdrawal of one of the partners and notice is given to the company, the retiring partner is not liable for the proceeds of the sale of any merchandise thereafter furnished by the electric company to the other partner, but the retiring partner occupies the position of a surety for the proceeds of all merchandise which had been furnished to the partners prior to the dissolution but which had not been sold by them and the proceeds remitted.
2. The retiring partner in such a case, however, is released from his liability as a surety for his former partner where the electric company accepts from the former partner his promissory notes, without the other partner's consent, for the sum of the proceeds derived from the sale of the merchandise furnished by the company to the former partnership and which had not been sold by the partnership at the time of its dissolution and the proceeds of the sale of merchandise furnished by it after such dissolution to the former partner.
"Every partnership is dissolved at any time by the mutual consent of the parties." Code, § 75-107. The personal notice given by Miller to Townsend, at that time an officer and agent of the plaintiff, was a sufficient notice to the plaintiff of a dissolution of the partnership. Code, § 75-108; Franklin BuggyCo. v. Carter,
It follows that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover of Miller on the contract under the facts of this case, and the court did not err in directing a verdict for that defendant.
The court properly overruled the motion for a new trial.
Judgment affirmed. Sutton and Felton, JJ., concur.
