Bank of Bellbuckle v. Mason

202 S.W. 931, 139 Tenn. 659, 12 Thompson 659, 1917 Tenn. LEXIS 134
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 1, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 202 S.W. 931 (Bank of Bellbuckle v. Mason) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bank of Bellbuckle v. Mason, 202 S.W. 931, 139 Tenn. 659, 12 Thompson 659, 1917 Tenn. LEXIS 134 (Tenn. 1917).

Opinions

Mr. Chief Justice Neil

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The complainant sued the defendants as partners composing the firm of J. M. Mason & Co. to recover $5,505.57 overdraft, together with accrued interest, making the sum of $6,585.54. A judgment was rendered for the latter sum. Defendant Hoover appealed.

It appears that the defendants were partners in the mercantile business at Bellbuckle. About October, 1912, they fell in debt to the hank by overdraft in the sum of about $3,000. Hoover was the money *661 ed man of the firm, but did not stay in the store or give any attention to the business, its conduct being confided wholly to Mason, in whom Hoover had the greatest confidence. When the knowledge of the overdraft was brought to the attention of Hoover, he promised to pay it off, but stated to the cashier, Shoffner, that it must never occur again; that Mason’s checks must not be paid unless there should be money in the bank to the credit of the firm to meet them. During the next year the firm checks drawn by Mason were from time to time honored until there was an overdraft of the amount sued for. After that time, during the same year, Mason and Hoover dissolved partnership. Shoffner, the cashier of the bank, then brought the overdraft to Hoover’s attention, and demanded payment. He refused to pay, and thereupon the present suit was brought. Hoover had no knowledge that the overdrafts were being made, or that his notice to Shoffner was in any respect being disregarded. However, it does appear that before the dissolution of the firm one check for $500 was drawn by Mason in the firm name in favor of Hoover, and the money paid to him. This was to pay what was supposed to be Hoover’s profits that had accrued up to that time. Another check for $1,400 was paid to Hoover returning to him that sum of money which he had loaned to the firm. These two checks constituted a part of the overdraft sued for. Hoover did not know, at the time he received *662 the checks, that on their payment they caused any part of an overdraft.

The chancellor rendered a judgment in favor of the complainant bank against Hoover for the full amount of the overdraft, with interest thereon, in all $6,585.54, and he has appealed to this court.

The best statement of the rule governing the present controversy is found in 20 R. C. L., “Partnership,” section 98, as follows:

“Third persons dealing with partners are not affected by private agreements between the partners of which they are not informed, but a partner, while remaining a member of a firm, may place limitations on the authority of his copartner to bind him either generally or as to particular transactions. When a partner gives to a third person notice that he will not be bound by the acts of his copartner, this amounts to notice that the implied agency has ceased, and such partner will then not be bound by the contract entered into by his copartner, although the fruits of the contract have been enjoyed by the partnership of which he is a member.”

The authorities are all in accord on the first branch of the rule, and the weight of authority supports the second, to the effect that under the -circumstances stated no liability will exist against either the dissenting partner or -the firm itself, but only against the member making the contract, although the goods, or money, or other property, as the case may.be, were used for the benefit of the firm. The reason is that the dissent of one member of a firm composed of *663 only two members (as to firms of three or more see Johnston v. Button, 27 Ala., 245), with notice to the person proposing to deal with or through the other member rebuts and destroys, for that transaction, the implied agency of the acting member, both as to the dissenting member and the firm. Under such a state of facts the person furnishing the goods or money can do so only on the individual credit of the member dealing with him. If one member of a firm buys goods on his own responsibility and places them in the stock of his firm, or procures money on his own credit, and with it pays the debts of the firm, that cannot raise, in favor of the person furnishing the goods or the money to the acting partner, an indebtedness against the firm, or against a dissenting partner, because of the want of privity between the person furnishing the money to the acting partner and the dissenting partner or the firm. It may raise an indebtedness in favor of the partner who- so furnished the money or the goods, restricted in the case of goods, perhaps, to a mere quantum meruit, for which he would be entitled to credit on a settlement of tne business between his partner and himself; a similar credit for the sum used in the case of money used as stated. But it could not put the dissenting partner or the firm in a contractual relation with the person furnishing the goods or the money to the other partner. There are two cases (Campbell & Jones v. Bowen, 49 Ga., 417, and Johnson, Clark & Co. v. Bernheim, 76 N. C., 139; Johnston v. Bernheim, *664 86 N. C., 339) which seem to hold that, if the goods be put into the stock, and used by the firm notwithstanding the known dissent of one of the members, an indebtedness against the firm, and against, each member, is created, despite the dissent. If this be a sound conclusion, then the right of dissent does not exist. A dissent by one partner which the other can overrule and set at naught is no dissent at all. The two cases cited, therefore, while conceding- the right of dissent in form, deny it in substance and legal effect.

As already intimated, the great weight of authority is the other way. The following illustrations from the cases are deemed useful: Stone belonging to the firm was sold by one member over the protest of the other with knowledge thereof by the purchaser. The sale was held void. Yeager v. Wallace, 57 Pa., 365. One partner, over the known dissent of the other, made sale of the whole stock to oné creditor, for debts owing to the latter by the firm. This sale was also held void. Ellis v. Allen, 80 Ala., 515, 519, 2 South., 676. A similar case is Wilcox v. Jackson, 7 Colo., 521, 4 Pac., 966. After one partner had given notice to the plaintiff not to supply any goods to the firm without his order or approval, it was held that he was not liable for goods supplied in defiance of such notice. Fertilizer Co. v. Pollock, 104 Ala., 402, 16 South., 138. In full accord is the case of Dawson v. Elrod, 105 Ky., 624, 49 S. W., 465, 88 Am. St. Rep., 321. In that case the court said:

*665 “Likewise it seems clear that notice that the authority to hind did not exist in one partner would relieve from liability the other partner, just as after dissolution he is no longer bound. The partner selling or trading with one partner cannot bind the other partner after notice that he will not be bound.

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Bluebook (online)
202 S.W. 931, 139 Tenn. 659, 12 Thompson 659, 1917 Tenn. LEXIS 134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bank-of-bellbuckle-v-mason-tenn-1917.