| Minn. | Dec 1, 1885

This is an action for damages caused by the negligence and unskilfulness of defendant as a physician and surgeon. It appears from the complaint, in substance, that defendant and one Graff were copartners as practising physicians and surgeons; that, plaintiff's leg having been broken, he employed the firm to set it, and to care for and treat him professionally; that part of the time Graff attended him, and did his work skilfully; that the remainder of the time his partner, the defendant, attended the plaintiff, and performed his duties negligently and unskilfully, causing the injuries complained of. Both were acting in the line of their partnership business, and *300 under and in pursuance of the employment of the firm professionally by the plaintiff.

The court below having sustained a demurrer to the complaint on the ground of a defect of parties defendant, the sole question raised by this appeal is whether Graff, defendant's partner, should have been made a party defendant. The admitted rule is that in actions on contract all persons jointly liable must be sued, but that in actions for tort, disconnected from any contract, the tort-feasors need not be joined. The question is, what rule applies in what are sometimes called actions for torts founded on contracts, or actions ex quasi contractu?

The principle running through all the cases seems to be that where the action is maintainable for the tort simply, without reference to any contract between the parties, the action is one of tort purely, although the existence of a contract may have been the occasion or furnished the opportunity for committing the tort. But where the action is not maintainable without pleading and proving the contract, — where the gist of the action is the breach of the contract, either by malfeasance or nonfeasance, — it is, in substance, whatever may be the form of the pleading, an action on the contract, and hence all persons jointly liable must be sued. 1 Chit. Pl. 87; Pomeroy on Remedies, § 282; Dicey, Parties, 437; 1 Lindley on Partnership, 482; 2 Collyer, Partnership, § 732; Powell v. Layton, 2 Bos. Pul. 365; Max v. Roberts, Id. 454;Cabell v. Vaughan, 1 Wms. Saund. 288h, 291e, 291f; Weall v. King, 12 East, 452; Bretherton v. Wood, 3 Brod. B. 54; Walcott v.Canfield, 3 Conn. 194" court="Conn." date_filed="1819-10-28" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/walcott-v-canfield-6573409?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="6573409">3 Conn. 194.

According to this test it seems to us clear that this is an action on the contract. The gist and gravamen is the breach of its terms, which, whether express or implied, were that these physicians and surgeons would treat the plaintiff with ordinary professional skill and care. It would have been impossible for plaintiff to state his cause of action without alleging the contract, for the liability of the defendant arose solely out of it, and not out of some general common-law duty independent of contract.

The only cases which appellant cites in support of his contention areGovett v. Radnidge, 3 East, 62, and White v. Smith, 12 Rich. 595. *301 The first of these cases has been overruled, and is no longer considered law. The latter was an action for damages for the loss of a slave killed through the negligence of a partnership, while in their charge under a contract of hire. The court placed its decision wholly upon the ground that the gravamen of the suit was not the contract, but the negligence of the defendant, and that the contract was mere matter of recital to explain that the slave was in charge of the defendant, and adds: "Proof of any other process by which the charge resulted would have been admissible." At least this is the ground upon which the court decided the case, and is the only one upon which the decision can be sustained, if at all. But in the case at bar the foundation of the action is the contract, and the gravamen of it its breach. There is no force in the suggestion that Graff was not a necessary party because personally innocent. This same suggestion was made by counsel in Powell v. Layton,supra. The act of one partner in the line of the copartnership business is the act of all.

Order affirmed.

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