Baldwin v. . Burrows

47 N.Y. 199, 1872 N.Y. LEXIS 7
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 16, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 47 N.Y. 199 (Baldwin v. . Burrows) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baldwin v. . Burrows, 47 N.Y. 199, 1872 N.Y. LEXIS 7 (N.Y. 1872).

Opinion

Rapallo, J.

Three distinct grounds of liability on the part of the defendants were submitted to the consideration of the jury. 1st. That of a copartnership resulting from the purposes for which the cotton was purchased. 2d. That of express authority to Blanchard from his co-owners to obtain the advances. 3d. That of a subsequent ratification by the defendants of the acts of Blanchard. The verdict being general, it is impossible to determine upon which of these three grounds the jury based their verdict, and consequently if it shall be found that either of them was improperly sub *206 mitted to the jury, the judgment cannot be sustained, unless it shall also appear that some one of them was so clearly established by uncontroverted evidence, as to have rendered it the duty of the court to direct a verdict for the plaintiffs.

The arrangement under which the cotton was purchased by Blanchard, as described by the concurrent testimony of all the witnesses who spoke upon the subject, established . only an ownership in common of the cotton. They all state that there was no agreement as to the sale or disposition of the property, but that that subject was left for future consideration. To constitute a partnership there must be a reciprocal agreement of the parties not only to unite their stock, but to share in the risks of profit or loss by the disposition to be made of it. Where several parties agree to purchase personal property in the name of one of them, and to take aliquot shares of the purchase without agreeing to resell jointly, there is no partnership. (Hoara v. Dawes, 1 Doug., 371; Coope v. Eyre, 1 H. Bl., 37; Holmes v. United Ins. Co., 2 John. Cases, 331; Post v. Kimberly, 9 John. R., 491.)

This proposition was correctly charged by the judge at the trial. But he added, that if the jury on the whole evidence should come to the conclusion, that although the disposition of the property was not previously a/rramged, yet the conduct of the parties, and what was subsequently done by them with each other, and by either of them with the knowledge of the others with third parties, satisfied the jury that it was the original Intention of the parties to home the cotton disposed of by a sale and divide the profits, then they would be partners.

He further charged, that it was for the jury to say whether there was enough evidence in the case to satisfy them that such was their original intention. Exception was duly taken to each of these propositions.

This charge clearly conveyed to the jury the idea that the undeclared intentions of the several parties finally to unite with each other in the disposition of the property, would be sufficient to constitute them partners. There was no evi *207 dence whatever upon which the jury could have found any mutual consent of the parties to such an arrangement. The fact of any arrangement originally, as to the disposition of the property, was disproved by all of the witnesses, and it clearly appeared that the question of shipment and sale did not arise until long after the purchase. It would have been erroneous therefore, to have instructed the jury that from the subsequent acts of the parties, they might find that the joint disposition had been originally agreed upon. But the judge did not so charge. The charge expressly assumed that the jury should find that no agreement or arrangement on the subject of a disposition of the cotton was made, and it directed the attention of the jury to the intentions of the parties as contra distinguished from their agreement. The fact of a subsequent assent by South worth & Prouty to the shipment of the cotton, though asserted by Blanchard, was denied by them, and was one of the main issues in the case. The question submitted by the judge to the jury did not require for its solution a determination of that disputed question of fact. Each of the defendants had testified upon his cross-examination, that he had bought the cotton with the intention of reselling it, and that he had never formed or expressed the intention of separating his share from those of the others. Prouty had testified that he intended from the first that the cotton should he sold, though he had not consented that others should sell his share without his knowledge. That they were to finish the cotton, and then look out for a market, but further consultation was to be had before determining upon what disposition should be made of it.

Southworth testified to a similar effect. He concedes the right of each to have taken his share of the cotton when ready for market, if no agreement for a joint sale were made.

Hnder this state of facts the jury may, without adopting the statements of Blanchard in respect to the consent to the shipment, have been satisfied that the parties intended, from the beginning, to make an arrangement with each other for a *208 .joint disposition of the property and -a division of the profits; and the effect -of the charge was to instruct them, that if it was their original intention that such should be the final result, they were partners, although no agreement or arrangement for such disposition had been made between them.

This, -toe think, was erroneous. Though goods be bought by several, under an agreement to hold in aliquot shares, but with the intention of subsequently forming a copartnership in respect to them, yet, 'until the partnership agreement is actually made, the purchasers are not copartners, but only tenants in common. There is still a “ locus perdientice” The partnership may never be formed. Either party may withdraw before the agreement is consummated. Neither of them, before that time, has power to bind the other by his contracts.

The learned counsel for the respondents endeavored to sustain this portion of the charge as referring, not to the original intention of the parties at the time of making the purchase, but to the intention existing at the time of the advance of the plaintiffs, and. as an instruction that if, at that time, the parties had, as testified to by Blanchard, agreed to a shipment and sale of the cotton, the partnership contract had become complete. But the charge was not so restricted; and it is the want of such restriction that rendered it 'objectionable and prejudicial to the' defendants. If the jury had been instructed that, although they should find 'that no agreement was originally made for a joint ■ disposition of 'the property, yet that, if they should find that before the advance had been obtained, such an agreement was made, there was a "partnership, they could not have found for the plaintiffs on that branch of the case, without giving credit to the statements of Blanchard, and rejecting those of Southworth and "Prouty. But, by the charge that the original intention of the parties, without any agreement dr arrangement between them, was sufficient to constitute a partnership, the jury were enabled to find a verdict for the plaintiffs, "even though they should deem the evi- ■ dence of the defendants entitled to the greater credit.

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Bluebook (online)
47 N.Y. 199, 1872 N.Y. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baldwin-v-burrows-ny-1872.