THOMPSON, Associate Judge:
After a bench trial, the Superior Court found that Travis Murrell and appellant James E. Brown were business partners, and it entered a judgment holding Murrell and Brown jointly and severally liable for amounts owed to appellee 1401 New York Avenue, Inc. (“1401”) under an office lease agreement (“the Lease Agreement”) signed by Murrell.
Brown now challenges the judgment on several grounds, arguing primarily that there was not a preponderance of the evidence to support the court’s determination that he and Mur-rell were partners (in the law firm of Mur-rell
&
Brown) at the time the Lease Agreement was signed. We affirm.
I.
In general, a partnership is formed “when two or more competent persons [contract] to place their money, effects, labor, and skill or some or all of them, in lawful commerce or business, and to divide profit and bear the loss in certain proportions.”
Beckman v. Farmer,
579 A.2d 618, 627 (D.C.1990) (alteration in original; quotation marks omitted);
see also
D.C.Code § 33-102.02 (2001) (setting
out the District of Columbia Uniform Partnership Act definition of partnership as “the association of 2 or more persons to carry on as co-owners of a business for profit ... whether or not the persons intend to form a partnership”).
While the “manner in which the parties themselves characterize the relationship is probative” of whether their relationship is a partnership, “the question ultimately is [an] objective” one: whether the parties intended to do the acts that in law constitute partnership.
Beckman,
579 A.2d at 627. The traditional “attributes of partnership such as profit and loss sharing and joint control of decisionmaking are necessary guideposts of inquiry, but none is conclusive.”
Id.
“[Wjhether a partnership exists is an issue of fact, turning less on the presence or absence of legal essentials than on the intent of the parties,” as gathered from “their conduct and dealings with each other.”
Id.
at 628, 630 (internal citation omitted). “[P]artners are jointly and severally liable for partnership debts and obligations.”
Id.
at 640 n. 28.
In this case, the trial court found that Murrell’s and Brown’s “actions while operating as Murrell & Brown overwhelmingly support the conclusion that they operated as a general partnership” and that Murrell and Brown “intended that the Lease Agreement be a contract between [1401] and the business Murrell & Brown.”
II.
In determining that Brown and Murrell were partners, the trial court relied in part on evidence that tax returns designated as partnership returns were filed under the name Murell & Brown. Brown argues that the court erred in admitting, over his objection, Murrell’s individual tax returns and the tax returns of Murrell & Brown. Specifically, Brown complains that the court admitted the returns as business records even though 1401 “failed to lay a proper foundation for the admission of those records under the hearsay exception of records kept in the ordinary course of business.” Even if we assume
arguendo
that the tax returns were erroneously admitted, this claim does not entitle Brown to relief. We have long recognized that “[prejudice arising from the improper receipt of evidence may be mitigated when the same information, or very nearly the same information, has been properly placed before the [fact-finder] through another witness or in a different form.”
Rotan v. Egan,
537 A.2d 563, 567 (D.C.1988). Here, accountant Henry Meadows testified that, in 2002, he prepared for Murrell & Brown a “1065” tax form entitled “U.S. Return of Partnership Income.” He also testified that partnership returns were filed on behalf of Mur-rell
&
Brown prior to his engagement, information that influenced his decision to “prepare[] the partnership form.” The court heard Meadows’s acknowledgment during cross-examination that “a partnership may be used to show the allocation of expenses among individuals who are not necessarily partners,” his assertion that he never knew Murrell and Brown to “share income,” and his statement that, by filing the “partnership” tax forms that he prepared, he was not “representing that [Brown] was a partner, necessarily.” In addition, the court specifically took note that the returns entered into evidence were signed only by the tax preparer and
“not Defendant Murrell or, in the case of the Murrell & Brown returns, [not by] either Defendant Murrell or Defendant Brown.” On this record, we are satisfied (1) that the tax forms admitted into evidence were merely cumulative evidence that partnership tax forms were created by Meadows for a business entity named “Murrell & Brown,” and (2) that the court had the information it needed to accord to that evidence the appropriate weight. If admitting the tax forms was error, it was harmless error.
III.
The remainder of Brown’s arguments on appeal go to the weight and sufficiency of the evidence to establish that Brown and Murrell were partners at the time the Lease Agreement was signed. Brown asserts that the trial court “did not and cannot point to a single instance where [he] held himself out to be a partner with Murrell in Murrell & Brown immediately preceding December 11, 2000 [the date when the Lease Agreement was signed] or thereafter,” and that nothing in the record “adumbrate[s] that Mr. Murrell either intended or considered himself to be a partner of Mr. Brown and vice versa.” We cannot agree. Although 1401 did not present proof of a partnership agreement between Murrell and Brown, as the trial court stated, it presented evidence that both Murrell and Brown “held themselves out to the world as partners.” The court cited several items of evidence, including exhibits showing that Murrell & Brown had firm letterhead; that “Murrell
&
Brown” had a checking account “from which both [Murrell and Brown] had the authority to issue checks”;
and that a sign behind the receptionist’s desk at the leased premises read “MURRELL & BROWN.” The court found particularly persuasive that “[d]ating back to at least 1998, Defendants Murrell and Brown practiced before the United States District Court for the District of Columbia under the name ‘Murrell & Brown,’ ” and that, in one filing with the District Court in June 1999, “Defendant Brown attached his
curriculum vitae,
in which he identified himself as a ‘Partner’ in Murrell & Brown beginning in 1997.” The court relied on authority that a firm’s holding itself out to taxing authorities, lessors, creditors, banks, clients, and its accountant as a partnership is “powerful evidence of a partnership,”
Landise v. Mauro,
725 A.2d 445, 452 (D.C.1998),
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THOMPSON, Associate Judge:
After a bench trial, the Superior Court found that Travis Murrell and appellant James E. Brown were business partners, and it entered a judgment holding Murrell and Brown jointly and severally liable for amounts owed to appellee 1401 New York Avenue, Inc. (“1401”) under an office lease agreement (“the Lease Agreement”) signed by Murrell.
Brown now challenges the judgment on several grounds, arguing primarily that there was not a preponderance of the evidence to support the court’s determination that he and Mur-rell were partners (in the law firm of Mur-rell
&
Brown) at the time the Lease Agreement was signed. We affirm.
I.
In general, a partnership is formed “when two or more competent persons [contract] to place their money, effects, labor, and skill or some or all of them, in lawful commerce or business, and to divide profit and bear the loss in certain proportions.”
Beckman v. Farmer,
579 A.2d 618, 627 (D.C.1990) (alteration in original; quotation marks omitted);
see also
D.C.Code § 33-102.02 (2001) (setting
out the District of Columbia Uniform Partnership Act definition of partnership as “the association of 2 or more persons to carry on as co-owners of a business for profit ... whether or not the persons intend to form a partnership”).
While the “manner in which the parties themselves characterize the relationship is probative” of whether their relationship is a partnership, “the question ultimately is [an] objective” one: whether the parties intended to do the acts that in law constitute partnership.
Beckman,
579 A.2d at 627. The traditional “attributes of partnership such as profit and loss sharing and joint control of decisionmaking are necessary guideposts of inquiry, but none is conclusive.”
Id.
“[Wjhether a partnership exists is an issue of fact, turning less on the presence or absence of legal essentials than on the intent of the parties,” as gathered from “their conduct and dealings with each other.”
Id.
at 628, 630 (internal citation omitted). “[P]artners are jointly and severally liable for partnership debts and obligations.”
Id.
at 640 n. 28.
In this case, the trial court found that Murrell’s and Brown’s “actions while operating as Murrell & Brown overwhelmingly support the conclusion that they operated as a general partnership” and that Murrell and Brown “intended that the Lease Agreement be a contract between [1401] and the business Murrell & Brown.”
II.
In determining that Brown and Murrell were partners, the trial court relied in part on evidence that tax returns designated as partnership returns were filed under the name Murell & Brown. Brown argues that the court erred in admitting, over his objection, Murrell’s individual tax returns and the tax returns of Murrell & Brown. Specifically, Brown complains that the court admitted the returns as business records even though 1401 “failed to lay a proper foundation for the admission of those records under the hearsay exception of records kept in the ordinary course of business.” Even if we assume
arguendo
that the tax returns were erroneously admitted, this claim does not entitle Brown to relief. We have long recognized that “[prejudice arising from the improper receipt of evidence may be mitigated when the same information, or very nearly the same information, has been properly placed before the [fact-finder] through another witness or in a different form.”
Rotan v. Egan,
537 A.2d 563, 567 (D.C.1988). Here, accountant Henry Meadows testified that, in 2002, he prepared for Murrell & Brown a “1065” tax form entitled “U.S. Return of Partnership Income.” He also testified that partnership returns were filed on behalf of Mur-rell
&
Brown prior to his engagement, information that influenced his decision to “prepare[] the partnership form.” The court heard Meadows’s acknowledgment during cross-examination that “a partnership may be used to show the allocation of expenses among individuals who are not necessarily partners,” his assertion that he never knew Murrell and Brown to “share income,” and his statement that, by filing the “partnership” tax forms that he prepared, he was not “representing that [Brown] was a partner, necessarily.” In addition, the court specifically took note that the returns entered into evidence were signed only by the tax preparer and
“not Defendant Murrell or, in the case of the Murrell & Brown returns, [not by] either Defendant Murrell or Defendant Brown.” On this record, we are satisfied (1) that the tax forms admitted into evidence were merely cumulative evidence that partnership tax forms were created by Meadows for a business entity named “Murrell & Brown,” and (2) that the court had the information it needed to accord to that evidence the appropriate weight. If admitting the tax forms was error, it was harmless error.
III.
The remainder of Brown’s arguments on appeal go to the weight and sufficiency of the evidence to establish that Brown and Murrell were partners at the time the Lease Agreement was signed. Brown asserts that the trial court “did not and cannot point to a single instance where [he] held himself out to be a partner with Murrell in Murrell & Brown immediately preceding December 11, 2000 [the date when the Lease Agreement was signed] or thereafter,” and that nothing in the record “adumbrate[s] that Mr. Murrell either intended or considered himself to be a partner of Mr. Brown and vice versa.” We cannot agree. Although 1401 did not present proof of a partnership agreement between Murrell and Brown, as the trial court stated, it presented evidence that both Murrell and Brown “held themselves out to the world as partners.” The court cited several items of evidence, including exhibits showing that Murrell & Brown had firm letterhead; that “Murrell
&
Brown” had a checking account “from which both [Murrell and Brown] had the authority to issue checks”;
and that a sign behind the receptionist’s desk at the leased premises read “MURRELL & BROWN.” The court found particularly persuasive that “[d]ating back to at least 1998, Defendants Murrell and Brown practiced before the United States District Court for the District of Columbia under the name ‘Murrell & Brown,’ ” and that, in one filing with the District Court in June 1999, “Defendant Brown attached his
curriculum vitae,
in which he identified himself as a ‘Partner’ in Murrell & Brown beginning in 1997.” The court relied on authority that a firm’s holding itself out to taxing authorities, lessors, creditors, banks, clients, and its accountant as a partnership is “powerful evidence of a partnership,”
Landise v. Mauro,
725 A.2d 445, 452 (D.C.1998),
and reasoned that “the use of the firm name Murrell & Brown in documents filed with the [District Court] is similar to making such representations to an insurer, bank or taxing authority ...
and in many ways carries greater repercussions if the representation is false or misleading.” The court also cited D.C. Rule of Professional Conduct 7.5, which “prohibits lawyers from stating or otherwise implying that they are partners when that is not the case.”
In addition, in reaching its conclusion that Murrell & Brown was a general partnership, the court relied on an (unverified) Answer that Murrell made in August 2005 to the complaint in a lawsuit that Brown brought against him. In that Answer, Murrell’s lawyers asserted on his behalf that, on or about May 1997, Murrell and Brown “formed a partnership known as Murrell & Brown through which they operated a law practice,” and that “Murrell and Brown shared profits and losses and, for over five years, worked together in the practice of law developing a prestigious practice well known in the area of special education law.” The court reasonably found that Brown’s
curriculum vitae
“eorroborate[d] [the] information filed” in Murrell’s 2005 Answer.
Brown contends that the evidence on which the court relied was “too remote in time to support a notion that a partnership existed in December of 2000,” the date of the Lease Agreement. We are unpersuaded by this argument. The evidence that Murrell and Brown entered into and continued in a partnership in years immediately prior to the date of the Lease Agreement was not direct evidence of the existence of a partnership as of that date, but it was part of a body of strong circumstantial evidence that Murrell and Brown remained in such a relationship when Murrell signed the Lease. In addition to the tax filing and other evidence that the court cited, Murrell testified in his deposition that it was Brown who negotiated the Lease.
Murrell also testified in the deposition that Brown handed him the Lease (the cover sheet of which states that it is between 1401 and “Tenant Murrell
&
Brown”) to sign, and that he signed the Lease — as “Travis A. Murrell, Partner”— in Brown’s presence, while Brown waited. In addition, a witness for 1401 testified that Brown signed a Murrell
&
Brown check dated February 7, 2003, in payment of the rent owed under the Lease for that month.
We are satisfied that the court’s factual findings were not clearly erroneous and that the court ruled upon sufficient evidence and did not commit legal error in concluding that Murrell and Brown were partners at the relevant time and that Brown was a real party in interest who was bound by the Lease Agreement. Wherefore, the judgment of the trial court is
Affirmed.