Elliott v. National Union Radio Corp.

24 S.E.2d 705, 68 Ga. App. 873, 1943 Ga. App. LEXIS 389
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 27, 1943
Docket29838.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 24 S.E.2d 705 (Elliott v. National Union Radio Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Elliott v. National Union Radio Corp., 24 S.E.2d 705, 68 Ga. App. 873, 1943 Ga. App. LEXIS 389 (Ga. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

Sutton, J.

National Union Radio Corporation, hereinafter referred to as the Radio Corporation, brought suit against G. Y. Elliott to recover $1496.01 on open account. Elliott answered, admitting owing $578.60, but denied owing more. Upon the trial of the case the court directed a verdict for the plaintiff for the amount sued for, with interest, and the exception here is to the judgment overruling the defendant’s motion for new trial, one special ground of which is that the court erred in directing a verdict inasmuch as under the evidence there were issues of fact which should have been submitted to the jury.

The evidence made the following case: Guy White and J. T. Smith, composing a partnership under the name of Smith Battery & Electric Company, hereinafter referred to as Smith Battery-Company, dealing in radio equipment, handled radio tubes on. consignment from the plaintiff. This partnership was dissolved and White entered into a new partnership with G. Y. Elliott under the name of Radio Supply Company. According to White, he turned over to the new partnership 2214 radio tubes, the property-of the plaintiff, having accepted in writing on behalf of the Radio Supply Company, as he contended, a written offer of the plaintiff to place radio tubes on consignment with that partnership. Elliott, contended that the partnership between him and White was not. formed until December 10, 1938, and that at the time White accepted the written offer of the plaintiff as of December 6, 1938, he was not his partner and was without authority to bind the partnership subsequently entered into. The offer and acceptance provided, in substance, that the Radio Corporation would consign a stock of radio tubes to Radio Supply Company; that the Radio Supply Company would, before the 5th day of each month, make a *874 report to the Radio Corporation, showing the number of tubes sold and the number on hand on consignment, upon receipt of which report it would bill the Radio Supply Company “for the tubes sold, lost or destroyed,” and the Radio Supply Company would make settlement by the 10th of each month. It appears that Elliott was aware of and acquiesced in the plan of the new partnership handling on consignment radio tubes from the Radio Corporation, though he testified that he never heard of the written agreement above mentioned until it was shown to him by a lawyer; consequently his partnership, as to any radio tubes actually accepted on consignment, would be liable as bailee for any unaccounted for. For this reason the written agreement purportedly entered into by White on behalf of the Radio Supply Company need have no special consideration on the merits of the controversy here involved.

Elliott denied that Radio Supply Company received from White, as the property of the plaintiff, 2214 radio tubes, but admitted receiving 500 which had been consigned to Smith Battery Company, 300 being actually received and 200 being in the hands, of some sub-dealers which he took over from Smith Battery Company. He also testified that White put in the partnership assets 300 tubes of another'kind as his own personal property. White caused to be issued to the plaintiff on or about December 1, 1938, an inventory showing on hand with Smith Battery Company on consignment 2214 radio tubes belonging to Radio Corporation. On or about January 1, 1939, the Radio Supply Company, through White, sent to the Radio Corporation an inventory showing 2214 radio tubes on hand on consignment. He testified that these tubes were the same 2214 tubes which had been with Smith Battery Company on consignment. After some months the partnership of Radio Supply Company was dissolved, Elliott buying out White’s interest therein and thereafter conducting the business as his own. On October 2, 1939, Elliott wrote the Radio Corporation that he had purchased White’s interest and that White would no longer be connected with the business and that he, Elliott, had assumed all obligations of the partnership of Radio Supply Company. Thereafter the plaintiff had some dealings with Elliott as Radio Supply Company. On January 2, 1940, Elliott returned 914 radio tubes to the plaintiff, whereupon he was billed with $1496.01 as the *875 purchase-price of radio tubes which the plaintiff claimed he was liable for as having been disposed of. Elliott refused to pay the bill, contending that he owed only $578.60, basing his calculations on the assumption that the partnership of Radio Supply Company originally received a total of 500 radio tubes, and not 2214, from Smith Battery Company. It is conceded that, if in truth 2214 radio tubes had been transferred to Radio Supply Company from Smith Battery Company, the bill would be correct.

It appears from the brief of counsel for the plaintiff in error that the court directed a verdict for the plaintiff on the theory that, even if Radio Supply Company had not received 2214 radio tubes from Smith Battery Company, but only 500, Elliott’s act in taking White into partnership had made it possible for him to deceive the plaintiff into the belief that 2214 radio tubes, for which Smith Battery Company had been responsible, had been taken over by Radio Supply Company on consignment and responsibility therefor assumed by the latter, in consequence of which the plaintiff had released White and the Smith Battery Company from all liability, looking only to the new partnership for an accounting, and that under the equitable doctrine that as between two parties, where damage was sustained by the act of a third party, the one putting it in the power of the third party to inflict the loss should sustain the same. This doctrine, however, is not applicable here, for the reason that, unless specially agreed, the partnership of Radio Supply Company did not in law become responsible for the debt, if any, of Smith Battery Company, and White could not, as agent for Radio Supply Company, bind that partnership to assume or pay such obligation, such an attempt being beyond the scope of his authority as an agent of the partnership. Partners are bound by the acts of any one partner only within the legitimate scope of the business of the partnership. Code, § 75-302. See Bryan v. Tooke, 60 Ga. 437; McRae v. Campbell, 101 Ga. 662 (28 S. E. 920); Standard Wagon Co. v. Few, 119 Ga. 293 (46 S. E. 109). There is nothing in the evidence which shows that Elliott had any notice that more than 500 radio tubes came into the partnership of Radio Supply Company, or that he knowingly ratified any act of White in assuming responsibility, on behalf of the partnership, for any greater number, and by his act in taking in White as a partner he did not, in the eyes of the law, empower him to do any act out *876 side of the legitimate scope of the business of Radio Supply Company. The direction of the verdict was unauthorized on the theory above discussed.

But as Elliott would be liable for any radio tubes accepted on consignment, and the defendant in error contends that the evidence demands a finding that the Radio Supply Company, to the full interest in which Elliott succeeded, received 2214 radio tubes from Smith Battery Company on consignment, particularly as evidenced by the inventory sheet sent in at the close of business for December, 1938, examination of additional evidence is pertinent.

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Bluebook (online)
24 S.E.2d 705, 68 Ga. App. 873, 1943 Ga. App. LEXIS 389, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elliott-v-national-union-radio-corp-gactapp-1943.