Fosdick v. Van Horn

40 Ohio St. (N.S.) 459
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1884
StatusPublished

This text of 40 Ohio St. (N.S.) 459 (Fosdick v. Van Horn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fosdick v. Van Horn, 40 Ohio St. (N.S.) 459 (Ohio 1884).

Opinion

Dickman, J.

Prior to the year 1848, L. B. Lewis and William Eichelberger, under the firm name of Lewis & Eichelberger, had been partners in the flouring mill business in the town of Lawrenceburgh, Indiana, and in July of that year, Samuel • Fosdick, the plaintiff in error, came into the firm as a dormant partner. He continued his relations with the firm, as dormant partner, having a one third interest in the concern, until September 17th, 1868, when his connection with the firm was dissolved, and notice of the dissolution was published in a Lawrenceburgh newspaper. Fosdick resided in Cincinnati, and there managed the financial affairs of the firm, and by accepting its drafts, making sales of flour, and raising the requisite funds for carrying on the business, rendered unnecessary the borrowing of money in Lawrenceburgh. With the exception of a few bank officers and directors in that town, very few if any of the residents appear to have known that he had any interest in the firm of Lewis & Eichelberger. In addition to the business of manufacturing flour, L. B. Lewis and William Eichelberger, under the same firm name of Lewis & Eichelberger, were engaged in Lawrenceburgh in other branches of business— in prosecuting other enterprises — in which Fosdick was in no manner interested. As a firm engaged in other than the flouring mill business, they were paying out on an average [463]*463about one thousand dollars daily; and relying upon their reputation for solvency, people were in the' habit of depositing money with them on interest, without reference to the use to which it was to be applied, and for which they were, aecustoméd to give their notes signed in the firm name of Lewis & Eichelberger. Among those who had loaned the firm money was the defendant in error, Cornelius Van Horn. It is not manifest, that he had any knowledge of Fosdick’s interest in the co-partnership of Lewis & Eichelberger, when, on the 21st of March, 1868, he made the loan and took from Lewis the note executed in the name of that firm. But we are satisfied from the testimony, that the money loaned by him was never used in the flouring mill business of Lewis & Eichelberger, and that Fosdick never derived any benefit from it whatever.

The material question however arises, did Lewis & Eichelberger borrow the money from Van Horn upon the credit of the firm in which Fosdick was a dormant partner ? At the time of the loan, Van Horn, in common with those who had monetary dealings with Lewis & Eichelberger not connected with their flouring mill business, might be presumed to know that they could not carry on their milling business without a supply of wheat. But, at the time of the transaction, when the money passed and the note was made, Lewis said nothing as to the use or purpose for which he wanted the money. He did not then represent to Van Horn or any one else that he was borrowing the money on the credit of Lewis & Eichelberger, as co-partners in the Homing mill business; nor does it appear that he represented Fosdick to be a member of the firm. The only conversation on the occasion seems to have been in regard to the time the paper should run, and the rate of interest to be paid. The testimony as to an alleged statement of Lewis, on the day of the transaction or the day before, that’ he wanted the money borrowed from Van Horn for the purpose of buying wheat, is too contradictory to sustain a reliable opinion. The fact that Van Horn loaned the money in the office at the mill, cannot place him upon a footing [464]*464•different from that of others, who with full knowledge of the milling business carried on by the firm, loaned their money to Lewis & Eichelberger to be-used in enterprises outside the flouring mill business. We need not inquire what firm of -Lewis & Eichelberger it was to which Yan Horn supposed he was making the loan, except so far as we have evidence of his acts and declarations. But certain it is, that while notice of the dissolution of the firm in which .Fosdick had been a dormant partner and of the fact of his interest in the milling business, was published in a -newspaper in Lawrenceburgh — the residence of Van Horn — as. far back as September, 1868, he did not see fit to assert his •claim against Fosdick until the y-ear 1875. Until Yan Horn called upon him shortly before the commencement of this suit, Fosdick had never heard of the loan in question. At the time of the transaction, Lewis did nothing and said nothing from' which could be inferred an intention to borrow the money on the credit of Lewis, Eichelberger and Fosdick. Van Horn’s previous dealings furnish no satisfactory proof of such intention. He may have previously lent money to the firm, but there is a failure of proof that it was loaned, for the purchase of wheat, especially in view of the fact, that the funds for buying wheat and running the mill were raised by Fosdick as the financier of the concern.

The liability of dormant partners to the creditors of the firm, is determinable by well settled legal principles. Those who jointly participate in the profits of business ostensibly carried on by another for his sole use and benefit, are equally liable when discovered, with the ostensible owner, to all creditors of the concern whose debts were contracted during the term of such participation. Bigelow et al. v. Elliot, 1 Clifford C. C., 28. According to the weight of judicial authority, where a partnership of two persons is carried on in the name of one partner only, and he gives & note for borrowed money.in his individual name, the firm is not bound thereby, unless it is proved that the money for which the note was given was borrowed on the credit of the [465]*465partnership, or was used in the business or for the benefit of the partnership. The -presumption is that the debt is the debt of the individual in whose name the obligation is made, if at the time, he is carrying on business separate from the business of the firm of which he is a member. If therefore the holder of the note would bind the dormant partner, he must prove something more than that he was a partner in business with the maker of the note. He must prove that the money was borrowed on the credit of the firm, or that it went to the benefit of the firm; but, the fact that it was borrowed on the credit of the firm, may be proved by the representations of the maker of the note at the time of the transaction, or by circumstances. U. S. Bank v. Binney et al., 5 Mason, 176; Manufacturers' and Mechanics' Bank v. Winship, 5 Pick., 11; Oliphant v. Mathews, 16 Barb., 608; National Bank of Chemung v. Ingraham, 58 Id., 290; Etheridge v. Binney, 9 Pick., 272; Yorkshire Banking Co. v. Beatson, Brit. L. R., 5 C. P. Div., 109.

These principles find an analogous application, where, in the same community, there are two firms of the same name, each consisting of the same persons, but each engaged in different kinds of business, one of which contains a dormant partner and the other does not. If suit is brought on a promissory note for borrowed money bearing the signature of the common firm name, the presumption is that it is the note of the firm not containing the dormant partner. The plaintiff, to recover against the dormant partner, must prove either that the consideration of the note was obtained on the credit of the firm in which the dormant partner was interested, or that it inured to the benefit of that firm. That it was upon the credit of that firm that the money was borrowed, may be proved by the declarations to that effect of the ostensible partners at the time of the loan, or it may be. proved by circumstances.

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Related

Oliphant v. Mathews
16 Barb. 608 (New York Supreme Court, 1853)
United States Bank v. Binney
28 F. Cas. 811 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts, 1828)

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Bluebook (online)
40 Ohio St. (N.S.) 459, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fosdick-v-van-horn-ohio-1884.