Buzar v. First National Bank of Greenville

2 S.W. 54, 67 Tex. 83, 1886 Tex. LEXIS 619
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 3, 1886
DocketNo. 2105.
StatusPublished
Cited by70 cases

This text of 2 S.W. 54 (Buzar v. First National Bank of Greenville) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Buzar v. First National Bank of Greenville, 2 S.W. 54, 67 Tex. 83, 1886 Tex. LEXIS 619 (Tex. 1886).

Opinion

Gaines, Associate Justice.

The cause of action in the court below was a promissory note executed by one J. B. Pennington to appellee. Appellee originally sued Pennington alone, but by amendment made appellant a party defendant, alleging that the latter and Pennington were partners in the cattle business, and that the note was given for a partnership debt of that firm.

The leading question in the case is whether a partnership existed between appellant and Pennington or not. The main facts in relation to this matter appear in the third, fourth, fifth, sixth and seventh findings of the court below, which are as follows:

“Third. Shortly before the second day of June, 1883, the defendant Pennington made sale of nearly all the cattle he had so purchased and put in the V brand, for the sum of about eightee.n thousand dollars, which sale he reported to defendant Buzará, and in compliance with the request of the latter, Pennington met Buzard at Denison on or about the twenty-fifth day of June, 1883, and they there had a full and complete settlement of said business up to that date,, showing that Pennington had in his hands sixteen thousand five hundred dollars of Buzard’s money, for which he was accountable. Pennington had a portion of this in money with him, and a portion in drafts and deposit receipts, *86 made out in the name of J. R. Pennington, which he then and there exhibited to defendant Buzard. Defendant Buzard then - told Pennington that he had concluded to discontinue the business, as it was not profitable, but after some conversation it was then agreed between them that defendant Buzard was to advance to Pennington the sixteen thousand five hundred dollars which • Pennington then had of his money, and that with the money thus advanced Pennington was to purchase cattle in Hunt and adjoining counties, and keep and take care of them, and sell them the next spring, unless a favorable opportunity for' selling them should occur earlier. That the expenses of buying, keeping and selling such cattle should be paid out of the money so advanced, and that, on final sale of cattle, defendant Buzard should receive back from the proceeds of sale the sum of sixteen thousand five hundred dollars, advanced by him, if such proceeds amounted to that much, and that the net profits of the business, if any there was, should be divided equally between defendants Buzard and Pennington. If the proceeds of such cattle should not amount to the said sum of sixteen thousand five hundred dollars, after deducting the amount paid for them, and expenses of keeping, etc., then defendant Buzard was to receive all such proceeds, and defendant Pennington was to receive nothing. It was further understood between them that said Pennington was to receive one-half of the net profits as aforesaid for his services in managing said business, in lieu of the salary he received under the prior contract. Said Pennington was not to share any possible losses further than, if there were no net profits, he was to lose the value of his services and labor. The cattle to be purchased under this agreement, were to be by Pennington "put in the V brand, and he was to use his discretion in buying and selling and managing said business, except that defendant Buzard gave him general instructions not to pay over certain specified prices for certain classes of cattle, and not to sell same for less than certain specified prices. This agreement was verbal, and was acted upon by both parties. There was no agreement or .instructions in whose name the business should be carried on. Defendant Buzard had the greatest confidence in the capacity and integrity of defendant Pennington. Defendant Buzard in entering into said agreement did not intend to, nor did he think he was entering into a partnership with said Pennnington.

“Fourth. The defendant Buzard claimed the V brand. , He was in Hunt county, in May, 1883, but did not ascertain that said *87 brand was recorded as Pennington’s, nor did he make any investigations into the matter. He did not know in whose name the cattle business was carried on, but was aware that the money arising from the sales was deposited by Pennington in the latter’s own name.

“Fifth. The note sued on was executed by J. B. Pennington in renewal of another note, which other note was executed for moneys advanced by plaintiff to him at various times, for the purpose, as professed by Pennington, of carrying on said cattle business, which he was managing for himself and defendant Buzard, and the greater portion of the money so advanced was expended in the purchase of cattle, which he put in the V brand. One thousand dollars of said money was advanced to Pennington to be used in the purchase of the Waldron pasture, which he said he was buying for himself and Buzard for the benefit of said cattle business, and was used in the purchase of said pasture.

“Sixth. Plaintiff, in making advances, did not rely on the responsibility of Pennington, as it was aware he had little means of his own, but made them relying upon the fact that the defendant B. F. Buzard was interested in said business and knew the latter to be abundantly solvent, and made the said advances upon the representation of Pennington that the money was to be used in said business, and believing it was to be so used.

“Seventh. The defendant J. E. Pennington frequently declared, after said money had been advanced to him, that he and defendant B. F. Buzard were partners in said business, and drew drafts in the name of Pennington & Buzard in the transaction of said cattle business, though defendant Buzard had no notice or knowledge of said declarations or acts, nor had plaintiff such knowledge at the time it advanced the money to Pennington.”

Upon this state of facts, the court found as a matter of law that Buzard and Pennington were partners in the business in the transaction of which the note sued on was given; and this finding is assigned as error. Where one furnishes money to another under an agreement with the latter that he as agent of the former is to use it in a certain business and receive a part of the net profits of the business as a compensation for his services, does this constitute them partners as to third persons? This is the point presented, and is one of the vexed questions of the law of partnership. The decisions of the courts of England and of this country, bearing either directly or remotely upon the point, are numerous and conflicting, and it is impossible to reconcile them. *88 In its discussion, principles have been laid down which, as applicable to every case, do not solve it, and distinctions have been drawn which seem to be theoretical rather than sound. As an example of the former, it has been announced in many cases that the test of a partnership is whether the person entitled to a share of the profits has a direct interest in the profits as such, or has merely a claim against the other contracting party or parties for a sum of money equal to a part of the profits. It is true that a partner has a direct interest in -the profits, and that a mere agent, working for a part of the profits as a salary for his services, has simply the right to look to the profits only as a measure of his compensation.

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Bluebook (online)
2 S.W. 54, 67 Tex. 83, 1886 Tex. LEXIS 619, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buzar-v-first-national-bank-of-greenville-tex-1886.