6 S.D. 498 | S.D. | 1895
The complaint of the appellant, who was plaintiff in ,the court below, after alleging its incorporation, as its cause of action against respondents as defendants alleged as follows: “Second, that upon the 1st day of June, 1889, certain persons of the city of Watertown, South Dakota, met together and organized a voluntary, unincorporated association under the name of the Watertown Trotting Association, with the following persons as officers thereof: The defendant Charles G. Church as the president; the defendant J. E. Kelley as the vice president; the defendant Ole Gesley as the treasurer, and the defendant A. L. Buell as the secretary. That said unincorporated association continued in existence until some time after the 1st day of August, 1890, without any change whatever being made as to the persons who acted as the’bfficers of the said association. That the defendants herein,-and each of them, from the time the said Watertown Trotting Association was organized until the 1st day of August, 1890, were members of the said association, and took an active and aggressive partin the management and control of its affairs. Third, That during the months of June and July in the year 1890 the plaintiff, at the instance and request of the said association known as the Watertown Trotting association, and with the knowledge and santion of each of the defendants herein, furnished, sold, and delivered to the said unincorporated association certain lumber and building materials, which were used in the construction of buildings and structures used by the said Watertown Trotting Association/ Fourth, That the lumber and building material so furnished by the plaintiff to the said Watertown Trotting Association were of the value of $333.70, and the last of the said lumber and building material was furnished and delivered upon
While there are a good many reported cases presenting facts analogous to this, the courts do not seem to have adopted the same view as to the relation of the individual members of an unincorporated association to each other. In many cases the members of such an association have been held to be partners, and liable as such. See Gorman v. Russell, 14 Gal. 531; Babb v. Reed, 5 Rawle 158; Taft v. Ward, 106 Mass. 518; Lynch v. Postlethwaite (La.) 12 Am. Dec. 495. In other cases, like Ash v. Guie, 97 Pa. St. 493; Lewis v. Tilton, 64 Iowa 220, 19 N. W. 911,—it has been held that members of such an association are not partners. A decision of this case does not seem to us to require the express adoption of either of these views. The complaint shows that these defendants were the general officers of an unincorporated association, under the name of the Watertown Trotting Association. Its purpose and object is disclosed only as suggested by its name. It is further stated that with the knowledge, approval, and sanction of these defend