110 Cal. 457 | Cal. | 1896
Action to recover compensation for certain paving and other street work which plaintiff alleged was done by him at defendant’s request. The answer consisted of denials of the material averments of the complaint. The trial was before a jury, and the verdict and judgment were in plaintiff’s favor for the amount of the alleged value of the work.
1. It was disclosed in the course of the evidence for plaintiff at the trial that the contract for the work was made orally between one Haley, the agent of defendant, and the plaintiff Williams—the latter acting, however, as was known to defendant, on behalf of a copartnership composed of Williams and two others, having no firm name, but carrying on business together and sharing its profits; the work in question was done by the firm at the joint expense. Thereupon defendant moved the court for judgment of nonsuit on the ground that plaintiff could not individually maintain the action upon a contract made with and performed by the partnership; which motion was denied.
There is no doubt that at common law all the members of a partnership, except dormant or merely nominal partners, must be joined as plaintiffs in an action of this character, and that before the code a motion for nonsuit made as in this instance would have been sustained. (Cushing v. Marston, 12 Cush. 431; Collyer on Partnership, secs. 649, 667; Story on Partnership, sec. 241; Wilson v. Wallace, 8 Serg. & R. 53.) In the case last cited, decided more than seventy years ago, the supreme court of Pennsylvania, while sustaining the precise objection made by defendant here, yet ventured this reflection: “Perhaps, weighing the conveniences and inconveniences, it would be more convenient that the parties should, after issue joined, proceed on the merits, than that the defendant should be allowed to nonsuit the plaintiff on a mere matter of form.” There may be some room for debate whether the objection is matter of form only; but our legislation provides that of the parties to an action those who are united in inter
. The question being not wholly clear on the cases in this state, it has seemed proper to refer thus briefly to
But the question now raised was not involved in any of these cases; and, on the other hand, it has been often decided that defect of parties having a joint interest with plaintiff in the contract, or other subject of the action, must be pleaded (Trenor v. Central Pac. R. R. Co., 50 Cal. 222; Wendt V. Ross, 33 Cal. 650; Dunn v. Tozer, 10 Cal. 167); thus, in Foley v. Bullard, 99 Cal. 516, a judgment in favor of plaintiff enforcing the lien of a street assessment, he being one of two owners of the demand in suit, was sustained; the court saying that if the defendants would rely upon the defect of parties plaintiff the objection should have been presented in their answer. In Rutenberg v. Main, 47 Cal. 221, the court said that the statutory provision requiring an objection for misjoinder of defendants to be pleaded, “ to ' the extent necessary to give it effect controls the principle that the proofs and allegations must correspond.”
The obj ect of the statute is to bring the parties to speedy issue and trial on the merits; and we are of opinion, following the incontestable trend of authority, that the absence as parties of some of the partners from a com
2. At the close of the evidence the court instructed the jury, on the request of the defendant, that if they found that plaintiff made the alleged contract on behalf of his firm, and that the firm did the work at the expense of the partnership pursuant to such contract, and none other, they should find for defendant. The court then, of its own motion, gave the jury other instructions which, defendant contends, were contradictory of that above stated and nullified its effect; we agree with this contention, but defendant took no objection or exception to such additional instructions, and must be deemed to have consented to the presentation of the case to the jury in this manner. (Wilkinson v. Parrott, 32 Cal. 102.) Moreover, the first instruction, being upon a point not in issue, was erroneous; and, being in favor of appellant, the conflict with other instructions is no ground for reversal. (Dennison v. Chapman, 105 Cal. 448.)
The judgment and order should be affirmed.
Belcher, C., and Haynes, C., concurred.
For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion the judgment and order are affirmed.
Harrison, J., Garoutte, J., Van Fleet, J.