We granted certiorari upon the application of the defendant, showing that the decision of the Court of Appeal in this case is in direct conflict with decisions of the Court of Appeal, Second Circuit.
The plaintiff, Ellis Trappey, who had been receiving compensation at the rate of $30 per week for injuries suffered in the course of his employment as manager and *635 supervisor of the Lafayette plant of the Trappey Beverage Company of New Iberia ■and Lafayette, instituted suit directly against his employer’s insurer, Lumbermen’s Mutual Casualty Company, which, upon learning that at the time of the accident the plaintiff had become a partner in the business, 1 discontinued the compensation payments.
The trial court, relying on the holding in the cases of Dezendorf v. National Casualty Co., La.App.,
Under our civil law system, unlike that of the common law, a partnership is an abstract ideal being with legal relations separate and distinct from those of its individual members; as was very aptly said by this Court more than a century ago, “The partnership once formed and put into action, becomes, in contemplation of law, a moral being, distinct from the persons who compose it. It is a civil per
*637
son, which has its peculiar rights and attributes. ‘Une personne Active et morale séparée des associés. Fictae Cujusdam personae vicem obtinet.’ * * and, as pointed out in the opinion, “ * * * the partners are not the owners of the partnership property. The ideal being thus recognized by a fiction of law, is the owner; it has a right to control and administer the property, to enable it to fulfil its legal duties and obligations; and the respective parties, who associated themselves for the purpose of participating in the profits which may accrue, are not the owners of the property itself, but of the residuum which may be left from the entire partnership property, after the obligations of the partnership are discharged.” Smith v. McMicken,
We think, as did the Supreme Court of Oklahoma in the case of Ohio Drilling Co. v. State Industrial Commission,
For the reasons assigned, the judgment of the Court of Appeal is affirmed.
Notes
. According to a stipulation in the record, Trappey’s Beverage Co. is a commercial partnership composed of H. W. Trappey, Bernard Trappey, A. F. Trappey, B. J. Trappey, George Trappey, Jr. and Ellis Trappey.
. In Dezendorf v. National Casualty Co., La.App.,
