Bresee v. Smith

237 P. 492, 73 Mont. 312, 1925 Mont. LEXIS 111
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 4, 1925
DocketNo. 5,654.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 237 P. 492 (Bresee v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bresee v. Smith, 237 P. 492, 73 Mont. 312, 1925 Mont. LEXIS 111 (Mo. 1925).

Opinion

*315 MR. JUSTICE STARK

delivered the opinion of the court.

The complaint in this case states two causes of action, in each of which it is alleged that the defendants are copartners doing business under the firm name and style of Stables of Registered Stallions.

In the first cause of action the plaintiff alleges that, between the first day of May and the thirty-first day of August, 1917, the defendants employed him to sell stallions for them, and agreed to pay him as a compensation ten per cent of the *316 amount of sales made, and in addition thereto such expenses as he necessarily incurred; that he sold certain stallions, and incurred expenses in that connection, and by reason thereof there was due him from the defendants on that account the sum of $881.10, no part of which had been paid.

In the second cause of action plaintiff seeks to recover the sum of $2,482.81, alleged to be a balance due him from the defendants on account of work and labor performed, and expenses paid out by him, between the ninth day of September, 1917, and the second day of June, 1919, under an agreement therefor alleged to have been made with the defendants.

The defendants Smith and McConnell filed a joint answer, denying all the allegations of the complaint; defendant Riley filed a separate answer.

Trial was had before a jury, and resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiff and against all of the defendants for the sum of $1,378.40. Defendants Smith and McConnell made a motion for a new trial, which was denied, and they have appealed from the judgment. Defendant Riley has not appealed, hence Smith and McConnell alone will be referred to as appellants.

From the testimony, it appears that for some time prior to May 1, 1917, defendant Riley had been engaged in the business of selling registered stallions; that he maintained a place of business at Missoula, the stationery used in connection with which bore* the inscription, ‘ ‘ Stables of Registered Stallions, H. Riley, Manager."

The plaintiff was experienced in the business of selling stock of the kind handled by Riley, and about May 1, 1917, he and Riiey alone entered into the arrangements set out in the first cause of action, and about September 9, 1917, these two entered into the arrangement which forms the basis of the second cause of action.

A partnership is the association of two or more persons for the purpose of carrying on business together and dividing the *317 profits between them, and can be formed only by tbe consent of all the parties thereto. (Secs. 7981, 7982, Rev. Codes 1921.)

“Anyone permitting himself to be represented as a partner, general or special, is liable, as such, to third persons to whom such representation is communicated, and who, on the faith thereof, give credit to the partnership.” (Sec. 8006.) “No one is liable as a partner who is not such in fact, except as provided in the last section.” (Sec. 8007.)

Plaintiff, having based the liability of the appellants on his claim that they were partners of their codefendant Riley, he assumed the burden of establishing that they were such in fact, or that they had permitted themselves to be represented as such to him, and that, on the faith of such representations, he had given credit to the partnership to the extent of the amount claimed by him for his services and expenses. All the testimony introduced for the purpose of showing the existence of a partnership in fact, or that appellants had permitted themselves to be represented to him as such, was given by the plaintiff, and summarized is as follows:

(A) About May 20, 1917, plaintiff was at Florence for the purpose of selling one of the stallions mentioned in the first cause of action. While he was there, Riley drove up in an automobile with appellants, met plaintiff in front of the stable where he had the stallion, and introduced plaintiff to the appellants, who remained in the automobile. Riley went in to look at the stallion, leaving the plaintiff talking with the appellants. What then occurred, as related by the plaintiff, was: The appellants asked him “if Riley had made any arrangements, and I said I was selling the horses on commission, and they said they were interested in these horses, that they had their money on them, and that Riley was selling them, and that they was glad he had got somebody, or to that effect.”

(B) That in June, 1917, in a conversation with Riley referring to the stallions which he was then selling, Riley said to him that “they [Miss Smith and Mrs. McConnell] were furnishing *318 the money, and he was selling them. That is what Riley said, that they was furnishing the money, and he was selling them.”

(C) Plaintiff testified to other occasions when Riley had made statements to the effect that Miss Smith and Mrs. McConnell were furnishing the money for the business, and he was running it.

(D) In another portion of his testimony, plaintiff said: “Well Riley told me that the women was furnishing the money, and he was furnishing the experience, and they were dividing the profits. Now that’s the way, and also the women told me the same thing—that they were furnishing the money, and Riley was the salesman, and it was a partnership, and they divided the whole of it. Now that’s the way they both told me.”

(E) That in July, 1920, he had a conversation with Miss Smith and Mrs. McConnell in the Missoula Hotel, in which he told them that Riley owed him something over $3,000, and “they said they would see that I got my pay before they settled with Riley.” In the same conversation they said, “if Riley had behaved himself here as he had over at the Falls they would have taken him in partnership on this hotel, just as they had over there on the horse business.”

The appellants and their codefendant Riley each testified that no partnership ever existed between them in connection with the Stables for Registered Stallions, or any other.

Accepting the testimony embraced in the above paragraph A as true, it falls far short of establishing the existence of a partnership between the appellants and Riley. ' (Flathead County Bank v. Ingham, 51 Mont. 438, 153 Pac. 1005; Beasley v. Berry, 33 Mont. 477, 84 Pac. 791; McCormick v. Stimson, 54 Mont. 272, 169 Pac. 726; Croft v. Bain, 49 Mont. 484, 143 Pac. 960.)

The statements in paragraphs B and C, viewed in the light most favorable to plaintiff, did not amount to a representation that the relation of partnership existed between the appellants and Riley (see cases above cited), and, even if they *319

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Bluebook (online)
237 P. 492, 73 Mont. 312, 1925 Mont. LEXIS 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bresee-v-smith-mont-1925.