82 Md. 64 | Md. | 1895
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The real question we have to decide in this case in whether the articles of agreement between Von Hafften and Gailey trading as the Sanitary Milk Company and the defendant made the latter a member of the firm, for if he was a partner, then he is liable for the trade obligations of the partnership. And before considering the terms of this agreement
In the subsequent case of Mollwo, March & Co., in the Privy Council, Sir Montague Smith says: “The judgment in Cox v. Hickman had certainly the effect of dissolving the rule of law which had been supposed to exist and laid down principles of decision by which the determination of cases of this kind is made to depend not on arbitrary presumptions of law, but on the real contracts and relations of the parties. It appears to be now established that although a right to participate in the profits of trade is a strong test of partnership, and that therfe may be cases where, from such perception alone, it may as a presumption not of law, but of fact, be inferred; yet that whether that relation does or does not exist must depend on the real intention and contract of the parties.”
And in the still later case of Badeley v. Consolidated Bank, Law, Rep. 38 Ch. Div. 239, decided in 1888, Cotton L. J., after stating that the rule laid down in Waugh v. Carner, that the participation in the profits of a business does of itself by operation of law constitute a partnership eannot
We take it then to be well settled that a partnership is a contract of some kind involving mutual consent of the parties, and when such a contract is entered into between two or more persons for the purpose of carrying on a trade or business, with the right to participate in the profits of such trade or business, then such a contract constitutes a partnership unless there be other facts and circumstances which show that some other relation existed. And if there be a partnership in fact, then the public has the right to assume that every partner has authority from his copartner to bind the whole firm in contracts made according to the ordinary usages of trade. And this principle applies not only to persons acting openly and avowedly as partners ; but also to others, who though not so acting are by a private agreement or arrangement partners with those who appear ostensibly to the world as persons carrying on the business. Without extending this opinion by special reference to the cases it is sufficient to say that the current decisions in this country are in full accord with the principles laid down in the English cases to which we have referred. The American cases are fully considered and reviewed by Mr. Bates in his carefully considered book on partnership. And before leaving this part of the case we deem it proper to say a word about Rowland v. Long, 45 Md. 439, referred to in the argument. The Court was dealing with that case as it was presented by the record, and there is nothing said in the decision when read in connection with the facts which con
Tested by these principles, we come to the question whether the articles of agreement between Von Hafften and Gailey, trading as the Sanitary Milk Company, and- the defendant, made the latter a partner in the company. Now, what are the terms of this agreement ? In the first place it is not an agreement inter partes, but an agreement between Von Hafften and Gailey, trading under the style of the Sanitary Milk Company, of the first part, and the defendant of the second part. And then it recites, that, whereas, the parties of the first part are securing additional capital for the purpose of carrying on the said business, the party of the second part is willing to contribute the amount so desired, namely, two thousand dollars, -upon the following terms and conditions. Then follows these terms and conditions, namely, Von Hafften is to be the general manager of the business, and for his services as such he is to be paid fifteen dollars per week. And then after the payment of all expenses in conducting the business of the company, “the parties of the first part” agree “to pay to the party of the second part for the use of the said two thousand dollars, an amount equal to one-third of the net profits arising out of the business.” There is no reference whatever as to a partnership. Von Hafften and Gailey, who had been engaged in the business of selling milk, needed additional means to carry on the business. And the defendant Benton agrees to furnish them two thousand dollars, in
Now, it may be true that a participation in the profits of a business standing alone would, unless explained, lead to the conclusion that the business was carried on for the mutual benefit and by the joint authority of all the parties participating in such profits. But when the participation in profits arises from a particular clause in an agreement between the parties before you can justly say that such participation is prima facie evidence of a partnership, it will be necessary to look not only to that clause, but all other clauses in the contract, and then determine whether the contract taken as a whole justifies'the conclusion that there is a partnership, that is, whether there is a joint business carried on in behalf of all the parties, or whether the transaction is one of loan between debtor and creditor, the loan or interest on the loan to be paid by an amount equal to a certain share in the profits. And looking to this agreement as a whole, it cannot, it seems to us, be considered as a contract of partnership, to be carried on jointly for the benefit of all the parties to the agreement; that is, a business in which all the parties are principals, with authority to bind each other by obligations entered into according to the ordinary usages of trade. On the contrary, by every fair rule of construction, it is an agreement by which the defendant was to loan to the company two thousand dollars
It may not be amiss to add what was so well said in Mollwo March and Co. v. Court of Wards, “If cases should occur where any persons under the guise of such an arrangement, that is, the guise of an arrangement, as creditor and debtor, are really trading as principals and putting forward as ostensible traders, others who are really their agents, they must not hope by such devices to escape liability, for the law in cases of this kind will look at the body and substance of the arrangement, and fasten responsibility on the parties according to their true and real'character.” “It is a question,” says Sir George Jessel, “of substance and not of mere form.” Pooley v. Driver, 5 Chan. Div., 458.
Outside of this agreement there is no evidence whatever to charge the defendant as partner. He did, it is true, now and then examine the books of the company, and gave his views as to the manner in which the business ought to be conducted, and in conversation with Von Hafften and Gailey, the members of the firm, spoke of the business as “ our business,” and when the company got into difficulties, he refused to advance any more money, preferring, as he said, to bear his share of the losses, rather than put more money in the concern. All these acts were consistent with his relation as a creditor of the company, for upon the successful management of the company depended the payment by it of the two thousand dollars loaned and the payment of part of the net profits for the use of the money. The defendant was a druggist living and doing business in another part ot the town. There is not a particle of evidence to show that he ever held himself out to the public as a partner, or was in any sense an ostensible partner. And the Court committed no error in instructing the jury that there was no evidence legally sufficient to show that the defendant was a partner, and in refusing to grant the several prayers offered by the plaintiff.
The evidence offered in the first exception was beyond all
Judgment affirmed.