Chapman, Lord, Wright & Co. v. Devereux & Noyes

32 Vt. 616
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedJanuary 15, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 32 Vt. 616 (Chapman, Lord, Wright & Co. v. Devereux & Noyes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chapman, Lord, Wright & Co. v. Devereux & Noyes, 32 Vt. 616 (Vt. 1860).

Opinion

Redeield, Ch. J.

The general principles of law affecting this case are not much controverted. But there is a most unquestionable conflict in the decisions of the courts in regard to their application to particular cases. It was decided in this court, in Brigham v. Dana, 29 Vt. 1, that persons jointly interested in the net profits of an adventure or business, or in the profits as affected by the losses, are partners. And the same point was so ruled by this court much earlier, in the case of Kellogg v. Griswold, 12 Vt. 291, and in a recent very able judgment of Met-calf, J., in Fitch v. Harrington, 8 Law Register, 68§. Chief Justice Marshall, in Winship v. The Bank of the United States, [620]*6205 Peters 529, uses language to the same effect: “ One who share's in the profit, although his name be not in the firm, is responsible for all its debts.” The distinguished Chief Justice uses another form of expression in this connection, which may be found to have some application possibly to another portion of this case: “A partner, certainly the acting partner, has power to transact the whole business of the firm, whatever that may be : [but surely nothing beyond that,] and, consequently, to bind his part-< ners to such transactions as entirely as himself.”

This seems to bring out the prominent inquiry or inquiries in this case.

I. Was there any credit given in this case to Noyes?

II. If not, were the plaintiffs ignorant, at the time of the credit, of Noyes’ true relations to Devereux, and to this purchase on credit ?

III. Was there any such connection between the defendants, in any portion of their business, as to create a strict partnership between themselves ?

IV. If so, was this credit so far within the range of the contemplated business of the firm, either as originally constituted, or subsequently extended, by the consent or with the knowledge of Noyes, as to render Noyes liable to the plaintiffs?

The law of the case will best be discussed further in connec" tion with the answer to these several inquiries, and the leading facts found in the ease.

The facts in this case are very imperfectly and somewhat indefinitely reported. We presume the auditors could have answered some questions, incidentally affecting the case, much more satisfactorily than this court. But as the auditors and the county court have seen fit to send the case here on this report, with a pro forma judgment for the plaintiffs, we must dispose of it with the best lights which we can obtain, or remit such questions to the auditors as seem not satisfactorily answered by the report.

1. We understand that while the account- was accruing, the plaintiffs were told by Devereux or his clerks that Noyes was a partner. This was while the transaction was passing, and while the plaintiffs might have learned all the facts of the true relations between the defendants. They could certainly have learned, upon [621]*621the slightest inquiry, in the immediate vicinity of their own place of business, how the business of this double agency was conducted. They might probably have learned everything now shown in the case, unless it was the fact that the defendants had agreed to divide the profits of the two agencies equally. And there is nothing in the case to show that even that was intended to be kept secret. It would rather seem from the manner in which the business of the agency was conducted, that even the division of the profits was not kept secret.

2. We understand that the plaintiffs, gave the credit to Devereux, took his receipt for the bills, and posted the account to him, and made no claim that Noyes was responsible to them in any way, until the commencement of this suit,

3. Under this state of the case it seems to us the plaintiffs must show that, by contract between the defendants, Devereux was justified in obtaining the goods of the plaintiffs on the credit of Noyes, or that some fraud was practised in the case.

Short of that it does not appear to us the plaintiffs have any just claim to hold Noyes responsible. For they either knew or might readily have learned all the facts in the case, and still after hearing the suggestion that Noyes was a partner, they continued to deal with Devereux as the sole party in interest, to give credit exclusively to him, and to make no claim whatever upon Noyes. Upon what ground then, is it competent for the plaintiffs now to hold Noyes liable?

We readily perceive that, to a certain extent, a partnership did exist between the defendants as to their business in the agency, and probably in the store of goods which was kept in connection with the agency, sometimes by one party and sometimes by the other. But even in this view, we do not understand that the purchases of the plaintiffs came fairly within the range of the 'copartnership business. The agency certainly did not authorize the purchasing agent to buy on credit. The very fundamental principle of the whole scheme of these protective unions, we understand, is that they shall not buy upon credit, but for money in hand. And although, by a kind of false gloss, the merchants and other traders and business men in Boston, and some other cities, probably, have got up some conventional arrangement [622]*622among-themselves by which they agree that a sale or purchase on thirty days’ indulgence shall not be regarded as upon credit, but a cash transaction, this certainly does not make it so in fact. If any term of credit is not credit, then no term of credit is credit, and the very import of the term is abolished and expunged, and the thing becomes impossible. We know that usage and custom will accomplish almost anything except impossibilities. But when it proposes to change the import of language it does not thereby change the nature of things. This same absurd attempt to convert a credit of thirty days into no credit at all may be turned against the plaintiffs as well as in their favor. If thirty days’ indulgence is cash in hand, then, of course, the plaintiffs gave no credit to any one, and have no claim against any one, because, forsooth, a credit of thirty days is cash in hand, and by consequence no credit was given, and no debt was created, the plaintiffs were paid for their goods at the time of delivery, and have no occasion and no claim to maintain this action against any one.

This court held this pretended custom void in Catlin v. Smith, 24 Vt. 85. We have no occasion to say more,about it. It was undoubtedly a credit, but, as we have before said, clearly a credit to Devereux and not to Noyes.

We think, too, it is equally obvious that the plaintiffs must be regarded as having knowledge, either in fact of the whole transaction and of the true relation between the defendants as to the manner of transacting the business of the double agency, or else that they had such knowledge as was ample for putting them upon inquiry, and that such inquiry would have resulted in the discovery of all the facts substantially as they existed. This being so, the plaintiffs are affected with the knowledge of all the facts which existed, and which upon reasonable inquiry might have been ascertained. So that in this view of the case the plaintiffs must be regarded as having elected to' give credit to Devereux alone, treating the credit as so short and so much in the nature of ready pay, that they probably regarded the responsibility of Devereux as sufficient.

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Bluebook (online)
32 Vt. 616, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chapman-lord-wright-co-v-devereux-noyes-vt-1860.