Brewster v. Hardeman

1 Dudley Rep. 138
CourtOglethorpe County Superior Court, Ga.
DecidedOctober 15, 1830
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Dudley Rep. 138 (Brewster v. Hardeman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oglethorpe County Superior Court, Ga. primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brewster v. Hardeman, 1 Dudley Rep. 138 (Ga. Super. Ct. 1830).

Opinion

[138]*138The facts in this case are admitted by the parties to be as f0]]0WS< On the 14th day of October, in the year 1822, John Hardeman, the active partner oí tne nrm oí John Hardeman & Co. (wbich was composed of John Hardeman, Thomas N. Poullain, end Philip Wray,) addressed an order in the name of the firm, to the plaintiffs io New York, for a certain nuro-ber of hats, which were forwarded pursuant to order. The plaintiffs, confiding in the solvency of the firm, were in no [139]*139baste to push their demand, but after some time placed the account in the hands of their agents, Brewster & Prescott of Augusta, to whom John Hardeman afterwards in the name of the firm promised to pay the same between the first and fifteenth of November, in the year 1826. Plaintiffs allowed themselves to be put off by this promise until April, 1829, when they forwarded the account to an attorney for collection, with instructions to commence a suit; but before suit was brought, the account was withdrawn from his hands by the plaintiffs, for the purpose of instituting an action, as they supposed they might do, in the District Court at Savannah. Upon learning, however, that the case was not cognizable in that court, they, on the 18th of March, 1830, enclosed the account to a professional gentlemen at Lexington, who, in the April following, commenced a suit, but agreed to suspend the same upon J. Hardeman’s promising to see Poul-lain, and the executor of Philip Wray, deceased, and confidently asserting that the account should be paid before the next term of the court. The suit was suspended, but the money not having been paid, was renewed, and service effected on the 14th day of September, 1830. Philip Wray died in the fall of 1827. > At the time of the dissolution of the firm, a full settlement was made by the other partners with John Hardeman — the former not knowing of the existence of the debt in question, but, by way of caution, taking a bond in the sum of $15,000 from Hardeman, conditioned to pay outstanding debts, if there were any. It is also admitted that John Hardeman is now insolvent, but at the time of the dissolution of the partnership, and for three years afterwards he was good for the money’ and that if his former partners had been apprized of the existence of the debt, they during that time could have forced him to pay it. The point in controversy between the parties, and which has been referred to me for my decision, is, whether the two defendants, Thomas N. Poullain and Thomas Wray, executor of Philip Wray, deceased, can protect themselves from the payment of this debt by the plea of the statute of limitations ?

3d. A debt, when once barred by the statute of limitations, can be revived only by a new promise, express or implied, and for which the old debt forms the consideration, 4th. After the dissolution of a copartnership, a power in each partner thus to revive against all, a debt from the obligation of which they have once been legally absolved, does not faHt within the. ex-, ception men-, tioned in the. second proposi-. tion, and therefore cannot be implied, 5th, Hence the acknowledgment of a debt, or a promise to pay it, made by one partner, after the dissolution of the firm, and after the debt has been ban'ed by the statute, will not revive the, debt against the former partner»» 6th. But cording to “ precedent and au-thonty” the ad-by one partner but'r6l/oréUtlíTe statute has in-wtif^be^binding upon the other as rtoeconsü t ine si new point from ute^shaii commence running,

[139]*139If it were necessary to rely exclusively upon the foregoing statement of facts, it would be impossible to give a definite solution to the question submitted ; for it does not appear in that statement, whether the promise of Hardeman to pay the debt between the first and the fifteenth of November, 1826, was made prior or subsequent to the dissolution of the partnership. Neither the time of the dissolution, nor of the promise, is disclosed. Among the papers, however, which accompany the statement, and to which I presume it was intended that I should refer, I find that Hardeman's promise to pay the account by the first or fifteenth of November, 1826, Was contained in a letter signed in his individual name ad[140]*140dressed to Brewster & Prescott of Augusta (plaintiff’s agents,) ancj Rated the 8th October, 1826. And it seems that on . . . uOW6VCr3 WfilCu acknow-pül'tn61S : for-m’pr * the twenty-second of December, 1828, lie again, ledged the debt, and offered to give his individual note at thirty duyA for the amount, including interest after four months from the date of the account. All embarrassment, ght have arisen from an imperfect statement of the facts, is entirely obviated by the explicit and definite language m which the questions submitted to my consideration are propounded. The gentlemen by whom the case has been referred to me, say — •“ The legal questions which we conceive to be involved, and which we propose for the determination of Judge Lamar, are these. First, W he-ther the admission made by John Hardeman, one of the partners of the firm of John Hardeman, Thomas N. Poullain, and Philip Wray, after the dissolution of the partnership, concerning the joint contract with the plaintiffs, that took place the partnership, is competent evidence to take the debt, out of the statute of limitations, and charge the other Secondly, Whether if the plaintiffs are entitled to recover at all, they are not entitled to interest after four months, according to the contract r

partner cannot by his separate acknowleag-tó a liquidated demand so as to charge his form-7th. After solution, one . - . open account in-rnteres™ WUh

The counsel for the plaintiffs in support of the affirmative side of the first question, has cited a number of cases,‘which are certa‘nly hi point, and if consistent with established principles of law, and uncontrolled by counter decisions, would of course be conclusive upon the. subject. (Whitcomb v. Whiting, 2 Doug. 651. Wood v. Braddick, 1 Taunton, 104. Smith v. Ludlow, 6 John. 267. 15 John. 3. 4 Conn. 336. 2 Pickering, 581. 3 Pick. 291. cases, 203. 2 Bing. 306.) It that the decision in the case upon the authority of which the subsequent cases mainly rest, has not been regarded with uniform approbation even in the Court of King’s Bench in which it was pronounced. In Brandram v. Wharton, 1 Barn. As All. 463, Lord Ellenbo-rough, although he seemed to yield a reluctant respect to its authority, expressed his decided conviction that the principle of the case should not be extended. In Atkyns v. Fredgold, 2 Barn. & Cres. 23, the authority of Whitcomb v. Whiting was again impugned, but not expressly overruled. — Chief Justice Abbot remarked that it was contrary to a former decision in Fentris. Bailey, J. said, “it may be questionable whether it does not go beyond proper legal limits.” Holroyd, J. also spoke of it as a case of doubtful obligation, and the whole court concurred in the opinion that any extension of the principle would be improper. From these judicial dicta Which were gradually undermining the authority of the case, its ultimate overthrow in the English Courts might have been Starkie’s cases, 81. Peakes’ must be conceded, however, of Whitcomb v. Whiting, [141]*141¶† 5 reasonably expected. Such however has not yet been the result

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Bluebook (online)
1 Dudley Rep. 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brewster-v-hardeman-gasuperctogleth-1830.