Fourth Street National Bank v. Whitaker

33 A. 100, 170 Pa. 297, 1895 Pa. LEXIS 1401
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 7, 1895
DocketAppeal, No. 121
StatusPublished

This text of 33 A. 100 (Fourth Street National Bank v. Whitaker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fourth Street National Bank v. Whitaker, 33 A. 100, 170 Pa. 297, 1895 Pa. LEXIS 1401 (Pa. 1895).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Dean,

On the 31st of December, 1891, Granville B. Haines, Richard Wood, Samuel B. Brown, Richard W. Bacon and William Whitaker, of Philadelphia, by the name of Haines & Company, formed a limited partnership, under the act of 1836, for carrying on a wholesale and retail dry goods business ; the term of the partnership was one year; Richard W. Bacon and William Whitaker were special partners, the others general; the special [300]*300contribution of capital by each of the special partners, Bacon and Whitaker, was $100,000; $50,000 each in cash, and a like sum in merchandise, their entire contribution as special partners' being $200,000. The articles of association were subscribed by all the partners, duly acknowledged and recorded in the office of the recorder of deeds for Philadelphia. At the end of the year 1892, under the provisions of the 11th section of the act of 1886, the partnership was renewed for another year. That section reads thus: “ Every renewal or continuance of such partnership, beyond the time originally fixed for its duration, shall be certified, acknowledged and recorded, and an affidavit of a general partner be made and filed and notice be given in the manner herein required for its original formation, and every such partnership which shall be otherwise renewed or continued shall be deemed a general partnership.”

In the articles of renewal is this averment, referring to their articles of the year previous: “The amount of capital contributed by each of the said special partners in the common stock was $100,000, one half thereof being in cash, and the other half thereof being in goods and merchandise, making the aggregate amount of capital contributed by them $200,000, as designated in the said original certificate, and the same remains unimpaired and undiminished, as their contribution to the present renewal and continuance of the said limited partnership, being in merchandise, an inventory and appraisement whereof have been filed in the court of common pleas No. 8 of Philadelphia county.”

On the expiration of this renewed partnership at the end of the year 1893, there was another renewal for a year with like averments and certificate in the renewed articles, which were also made of record, as required by the act. The business was carried on, under this last renewal, until the 26th of March, 1894, when a general assignment for the benefit of creditors was made by the partnership. Before the assignment, the Fourth Street National Bank, the plaintiff, became the holder, for value, of six notes drawn by the partnership, each in the sum of $5,000, payable to the bank’s order on demand, and dated respectively February 24, March 1, 5, 8,14, and 21,1894. These not being paid on demand, the bank brought suit against all the members of the firm, as general partners. The sworn statement of claim [301]*301avers: 1. That plaintiff accepted the notes on the faith of the writing signed by all the members of the partnership, and recorded in the office for the recording of deeds, the 30th of December, 1893. 2. That said writing set forth that the original contribution of $200,000 in cash and merchandise, by the special partners, “ remains unimpaired and undiminished as their contribution to the present renewal.” 3. That at the time said writing was made and put of record, the entire original capital contributed by the special partners had been consumed and lost in the business, and the partnership of Haines & Company was insolvent. 4. That the statement, that the same remained unimpaired and undiminished, was false in fact.

The plaintiff therefore averred liability of each and all of the members of the firm as general partners.

To this the defendant, William Whitaker, made affidavit of defense, setting out, that on the last renewal of the partnership, on the 30th of December, 1893, all the members joined in a petition to the court of common pleas for the appointment of an appraiser of the assets of the proposed renewed partnership, and the appointment was made; that the appraiser under oath reported he had examined carefully and appraised the goods and merchandise of the proposed partnership, and that these included the original contributions of Whitaker and Bacon, the special partners, and the value of the same, as merchandise, was $200,000; that the partnership had other merchandise, accounts and cash, more than sufficient to pay its debts ; further, that the $200,000 of merchandise appraised as the original contribution of capital by the special partners was set apart as such, and transferred to the new partnership. The defendant then avers on this preliminary statement of facts: 1. That he, at the time of the renewal, believed the statement and affidavit of the appraiser to be true, and that he, defendant, had done all that was required of him as a special partner. 2. That he is informed and believes the notes were not accepted by plaintiff on the faith of the statement; that the notes in suit are renewals of notes given for partnership debts of 1893, and are but a continuation of the evidence of indebtedness of the older partnership, before the articles of December, 1893, for renewal were entered into. 3. That the notes sued on were given without his knowledge or consent, and plaintiff knew when it accepted [302]*302them the general partners had no authority to impose liability on him except as special partner. 4. That he has no personal knowledge as to any misstatements of fact in the articles of 1893; that he believed the statements of the general partners and of the appraiser, whose duty it was to know, to be true. On the record thus made up, plaintiff took a rule for judgment for want of a sufficient affidavit of defense; after argument, the court below, in a carefully considered opinion, made the rule absolute, and defendant appeals.

The averment in plaintiff’s statement that when the last renewal was signed the entire capital stock of the special partners had been lost in the business of Haines & Company, and the partnership was largely insolvent, is not denied in the affidavit of defense; it is denied by defendant there was any intentional misstatement on his part. It must, therefore, be here taken as true that, when all the members joined in the representation on the public records that the $200,000 capital remained unimpaired and undiminished, that statement was untrue in fact.

The question then is, what effect, if any, does an unintentional misrepresentation of this character have on the liability of defendant as a member of the partnership ? As already quoted, the 11th section of the act provides for the attesting and recording of articles of renewal, and public notice of the same, under the same formalities as are required in the original formation of the partnership. The penalty of a failure to comply with the directions of the act as to the first organization is found in the 8th section, as follows : “ And'if any false statement be made in such certificate or affidavit, all the persons interested in such partnership shall be liable for all engagements thereof, as general partners.” '

This court held, in Haddock v. Grinnell Co., 109 Pa. 372, that: “ This evidently means that the affidavit shall give as full information upon the renewal as upon the original formation of the limited partnership. A mere formal affidavit setting forth the renewal only, would not give creditors any valuable information as to the condition of the firm, and the object of the act was to provide this notice.”

Andrews v. Schott, 10 Pa.

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Related

Andrews v. Schott
10 Pa. 47 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1848)
Haddock v. Grinnell Manufacturing Corp.
109 Pa. 372 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1885)
Vanhorn v. Corcoran
18 A. 16 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1889)

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Bluebook (online)
33 A. 100, 170 Pa. 297, 1895 Pa. LEXIS 1401, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fourth-street-national-bank-v-whitaker-pa-1895.