Allen v. Rouseville Cooperage Co.

161 S.E. 50, 157 Va. 355, 1931 Va. LEXIS 326
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 12, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 161 S.E. 50 (Allen v. Rouseville Cooperage Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allen v. Rouseville Cooperage Co., 161 S.E. 50, 157 Va. 355, 1931 Va. LEXIS 326 (Va. 1931).

Opinion

Epes, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

On July 24, 1924, Rouseville Cooperage Company, a foreign corporation, filed its petition for attachment in the Corporation Court of the city of Staunton, against George Hallauer and Charles J. Allen, who are residents of the State [358]*358of New York. The purpose of the attachment proceeding is to recover a past due debt which the petitioner claims to be due to it from the defendants.

The ground of attachment is that Hallauer and Allen are both nonresidents of Virginia, and that each owns an undivided one-third interest in a lot of land in Staunton, Virginia, upon which there is an apple evaporating plant, and in the machinery and personal property in that plant.

The allegation of the petition with reference to the indebtedness of the defendants to the petitioner reads:

“George Hallauer and Charles J. Allen, formerly doing business as Hallauer and Allen, are justly indebted to it in the sum of $2,300.00 with interest thereon from September 29,1923, * * * evidenced by the promissory negotiable note of the said Hallauer and Allen, in the said sum of $2,-300.00 dated September 19, 1923, and payable forty-five days after its date at the Oil City National Bank, with interest from date, a copy of which said note, marked Exhibit A, is filed herewith and prayed to be received and read as a part of this petition.”

Exhibit A is in the words and figures following:

“For Renewal

“$2,300.00 Rochester, N. Y., September 29, 1923.

“Forty-Five..........after date we promise to pay to the order of Rouseville Cooperage Co.

“Two Thousand Three Hundred............0/00 Dollars

“Payable at Oil City National Bank

“Value received with interest

“No. 17.25 Due Hallauer & Allen.

“Per Geo. Hallauer.”

(Notation on Back)

“Hallauer & Allen

“November, 14 2,300.00

“Rouseville Cooperage Co.

“L. M. Mann, Prest.”

The pleadings and the evidence are silent as to by whom [359]*359and under what circumstances the words “for renewal” and the notations on the back of this note were made.

An attachment issued and was levied on July 25, 1924, upon “the one-third undivided interest of George Hallauer and also on the one-third undivided interest of Charles J. Allen” in the property in the city of Staunton mentioned in the petition.

A copy of the attachment was served upon Hallauer on November 11, 1924, in the county of Rappahannock; but Hallauer has not filed any pleading or made any defense in this cause, and is not here appealing. He was, however, introduced as a witness by Rouseville Cooperage Company and testified in this cause.

There was no process served upon Allen; but by leave of court, Allen, in December, 1925, filed his answer to the petition. In his answer he denies that he and Hallauer had been in partnership at any time since July, 1920; that Hallauer had authority to obligate him (Allen) for the payment of this note or the debt for which it was given; and that he was in any way liable on this note or the debt for which it was given. It is to be noted that it is not contended that the debt here sued upon is the obligation of or has any connection with any partnership existing between Hallauer and Allen prior to July 20, 1920.

All the transactions involved in this proceeding took place in the State of New York, and the contract sued upon was made and to be executed there. All the evidence was in the form of depositions taken in New York.

The court heard the case without the intervention of a jury and entered judgment in favor of Rouseville Cooperage Company against George Hallauer and Charles J. Allen for $2,300.00 with interest thereon from September 29, 1923, and costs. It also adjudged that the property levied on belonged to a partnership composed of Allen and Wooster, that Hallauer had no interest therein, but that the judg[360]*360ment rendered against Hallauer and Allen was a lien on Allen’s interest therein.

From this judgment of the court Allen has appealed, and has been granted a writ of error. In his petition he, in effect, makes only two assignments of error.

The first assignment of error is that the court erred in not dismissing this proceeding as to Allen, because the evidence is insufficient to support a finding that Hallauer and Allen were partners, or that Hallauer was in any other way authorized to obligate Allen for the payment of this note or the debt for which it was given.

The note sued upon was executed and delivered by Hallauer to the Rouseville Cooperage Company. Allen had no knowledge of the fact that such a note had been executed by Hallauer until payment thereof was demanded of him. The consideration for which the note was given was the purchase price of a quantity of barrels purchased from the Rouseville Cooperage Company in 1922, through Dillaphaine H. Wright, a broker, under a written contract made by Hallauer in the name of Hallauer and Allen, which Hallauer signed “Hallauer & Allen.” These barrels, or certainly most of them, were used as containers in which to ship vinegar produced from apple waste at a vinegar plant in Victor, New York, which was operated by George Hallauer and Charles J. Allen during the five months period June to October, 1922.

About these facts the parties are agreed. The controversy is with reference to the nature and terms of the agreement between Allen and Hallauer under which they were manufacturing vinegar at this plant; and whether, under the agreement actually existing between them Hallauer had authority, express or implied, to obligate Allen, jointly with himself, for the purchase of the barrels from Rouseville Cooperage Company, and for the payment of the note here sued upon.

[361]*361The facts leading up to the making of the agreement under which Hallauer and Allen were operating this plant are as follows:

Allen and Wooster, as partners, were operating several apple evaporating plants, and Allen, Wooster and Keymel were operating another. Hallauer was also operating several apple evaporating plants, some of which he operated individually, and others of which he operated in partnership with persons other than Allen or Wooster. Hallauer individually and the partnerships in which he was interested had accumulated a quantity of apple waste (cores and skins) in their operations, as had also the partnerships in which Allen was interested.

In the spring of 1922, Hallauer conceived the idea of disposing of the waste owned by him and his partners by converting it into vinegar, and for this purpose arranged to get the use of a large vinegar plant in Victor, New York, which was not being operated by its owner. He was to pay nothing for the use of the plant, but it was necessary to repair the plant and “soak up the generators” before it could be operated. This preliminary expense was larger than Hallauer felt would be warranted by the quantity of vinegar which could be made from the waste owned by him and the partnerships in which he was interested.

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Bluebook (online)
161 S.E. 50, 157 Va. 355, 1931 Va. LEXIS 326, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-v-rouseville-cooperage-co-va-1931.