Clinchfield Fuel Co. v. W. M. Lundy & Son

169 S.W. 563, 130 Tenn. 135, 3 Thompson 135, 1914 Tenn. LEXIS 9
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 1, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 169 S.W. 563 (Clinchfield Fuel Co. v. W. M. Lundy & Son) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clinchfield Fuel Co. v. W. M. Lundy & Son, 169 S.W. 563, 130 Tenn. 135, 3 Thompson 135, 1914 Tenn. LEXIS 9 (Tenn. 1914).

Opinion

MR. Justice Buchanan

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This was a suit by the Fuel Company against W. M. and Terry H. Lundy, as partners trading under the firm name and style of W. M. Lundy & Son. The chancellor granted a decree against W. M. Lundy for $2,100.86, principal, and certain interest) which added to the principal amounted to the sum of $2,307.36, and one-half of the costs of the cause, and a decree against complainant for the other one-half of the costs. There was no appeal by W. M. Lundy from the above portion *137 of the decree, and no appeal by complainant from the part of the decree taxing it with one-half of the costs. The chancellor dismissed the cross-bill filed by W. M. and Terry H. Lnndy, and from this part of the decree the cross-complainants prayed and there was granted to them an appeal, which they failed to prosecnte by the execntion of an appeal bond, so that this part of the decree is not in question here. The decree denied complainant a recovery against Terry Lundy for the amount of the principal and interest for which he was sued as .a member of the partnership, and from this much of the decree the complainant appealed and has assigned error.

The material facts are as follows: On March 17, 1911, the partnership, W. M. Lundy & Son, entered into two contracts with the Fuel Company, by one of which contracts the partnership bought from the Fuel Company three thousand tons of lump Clinchfield coal at the price of $1.50 per ton of two thousand pounds, free on board cars at the mines, shipments to be made in equal installments monthly. By the other of such contracts the partnership bought of the Fuel Company one thousand tons of run of mine coal, at the price of ninety cents per ton, to the date October 1, 1911, and of $1 per ton for the remainder of the term of the contract, each ton to be two thousand pounds in weight, the grade of the coal to be No. 1, and shipments to be made monthly in equal installments.

Each of these contracts was to become effective on May 1, 1911, and to continue in effect until April 30, *138 1912. Tie principal sum for which, the decree was rendered in the canse was the balance shown to be dne the Fuel Company for coal shipped nnder these two contracts during this term for which they were to be effective, and the correctness of that balance is not in question.

In due course of mail after it was written, the Fuel Company received the following communication, dated December 8, 1911:

“Clinchfield Fuel Company, Spartansburg, South Carolina — G-entlemen: This is to give notice that, on November' 30, 1911, the partnership of W. M. Lundy & Son was dissolved, Terry H. Lundy withdrawing from the firm. W. M. Lundy will carry on the business as heretofore, will pay all debts, and collect all accounts of the partnership.

“Yours truly, "W. M. Lundy,

“TeeRy H. Lundy.

The general manager of the Fuel Company, on cross-examination by counsel for the Lundys, was asked if the company had received the above notice, and replied :

' “Clinchfield Fuel Company received notice of the dissolution of the partnership of W. M. Lundy & Son. However, the Clinchfield Fuel Company did not release W. M. Lundy’s son from the contract, and the contract stands W. M. Lundy & Son. The notice of dissolution was not accepted as indicating a desire by Mr. Lundy to cancel the contract. On the contrary, he continued to order coal thereunder at prices named therein and *139 paid therefor down to January. At the time of dissolution, the price named in the contract to Mr. Lundy was under the price obtained for shipments in the open market known as ‘spot sales.’ Had Mr. Lundy requested cancellation of the contract, succeeding shipments would have been made at the open market price, which was $1.75 or more per ton. We recognized Mr. W. M. Lundy as the head of W. M. Lundy & Son, his personal checks were sent in payment for all coal shipped prior to dissolution notice, and all shipments, made therefor down to the time he withheld payment in January. ’ ’

It further appears that the balance on the account sued for was for coal shipped during the months of January, February, and March of the year 1912, and that payment had been made for all prior shipments, and that after receipt of the notice of dissolution all coal shipped by the Fuel Company was billed to W. M. Lundy, with the exception of a bill of date March 20, 1912, amounting to $72, unintentionally billed to the firm. After stating which the general manager further states:

“But the invoice price per.ton of the coal was the same as named in the contract, because the contract was assumed by Mr. Lundy. Mr. Lundy was aware that the cancellation of his contract and the purchase of coal on the open market would have entailed an extra cost per ton.”

Under the facts disclosed, we cannot agree to the conclusion reached by the chancellor as to the nonlia- *140 bility of Terry H. Lnndy. The contracts on -wMcli he was sued were made during the life of a general partnership of which he was a member, and he thereby became bound to make payment for the coal delivered under the contracts at the prices fixed by the terms of the contracts. By the dissolution agreement between Mm and his copartner, all of his partnership assets passed to his copartner, and the latter assumed the payment of all of the partnership debts. Along with the other assets which so passed to his copartner were the two contracts here in suit. The'notice of dissolution served on the Fuel Company was proper authority from the retiring partner to that company to deliver the balance of the coal to the copartner who had taken over the assets and assumed the liabilities of the firm. That notice was also effective to advise the Fuel Company that the retiring partner would not be bound for new credits extended to the firm or the partner who had assumed the debts and taken over the assets thereof, but the notice was not 'effective to destroy the liability of Terry H. Lundy, the retiring partner, to pay the Fuel Company the contract price on delivery of the coal wMch remained undelivered when he retired from the firm; and this for the good reasons: (1) He became liable so to pay when the two contracts were signed. (2) He reaffirmed this original liability when by the dissolution notice he said in substance to the Fuel Company: Execute your contract, but instead of delivering the balance of the coal to the old firm, now extinct, make the delivery of it to *141 W. M. Lundy, my former partner, ■who has taken over the assets and assumed the debts of the defunct partnership.

In carrying out this agreement between the parties to whom it was bonnd under the two contracts to make delivery of the coal at the prices named (which by the way the Enel Company did to its own hart, coal having increased in value), that company did not waive its rights, acquired as stated, to look to the retiring partner for pay when it fulfilled its contracts, modified, as those contracts were, in respect of the person to whom delivery should he made.

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Related

Martinez v. McGregor-Doniger, Inc.
173 A.2d 221 (District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 1961)
Lindley v. Seward
5 N.E.2d 998 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1937)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
169 S.W. 563, 130 Tenn. 135, 3 Thompson 135, 1914 Tenn. LEXIS 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clinchfield-fuel-co-v-w-m-lundy-son-tenn-1914.