Gulf City Shingle Manufacturing Co. v. Boyles

129 Ala. 192
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 129 Ala. 192 (Gulf City Shingle Manufacturing Co. v. Boyles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gulf City Shingle Manufacturing Co. v. Boyles, 129 Ala. 192 (Ala. 1900).

Opinion

HA11ALSON, J.

1. The facts out of which this suit .grew were, that the plaintiff claimed under a tax deed the land from which the timber in question was cut, which’land the Slaughters — Howard, Archie and Du-pree — claimed to own. Litigation was pending in the •chancery court between the .plaintiff and the Slaughters about the land, and a settlement or compromise, of the suit was effected by an agreement entered into by T. H. Boyles, representing the plaintiff, as her agent, and Howell Slaughter, representing the Slaughters, by the [196]*196terms of which agreement, the cypress timber in question was to be gotten out from said land by said Boyles, ■and sold by him, paying out of the proceeds the expenses for so doing, and dividing the net proceeds equally between Mrs. Boyles and the Slaughters, — one-half going to the one and one-half to the others.

The evidence tends to 'Show that T. H. Boyles, the plaintiff’s husband and agent in the transaction, got the timber out and had it brought to Mobile and delivered to J. B. Stiggins, a lumber agent, for sale, 'at its market price. It also tends to show, that Archie Slaughter, some two months before this, as deposed to by Dr. Tunstall, the president of the defendant corporation, sold the timber to said Tunstall for the defendant, and after it -was delivered to said Stiggins by said Boyles said Archie gave -an order on Stiggins. to deliver it to defendant, which he did. The contention of the defendant is, that this sale passed the title ■of the timber to it, -on two grounds; 1st, that by the terms of said agreement, there was a partnership between the plaintiff and the Slaughters, and if so, Archie Slaughter liad the full power and authority to sell the timber to defendant; and, 2d, that whether a partnership existed between them or not, said Archie, by the terms of the agreement, had the right, as well as plaintiff’s said agent, T. H. Boyles, to sell the same to defendant. The plaintiff disputes both propositions, contending that the arrangement between her and the Slaughters did not constitute them partners inter sese, bestowing authority on any partner to sell the timber, but was one merely for the sale and division of the proceeds of property owned jointly by her and the Slaughters; and that Archie Slaughter had no power by virtue of any special authority from her to sell the property to defendant.

2. Under the evidence, we have no difficulty in holding that the arrangement between the parties did not constitute a partnership between them. Whether a partnership exists, ever, between persons, growing out of a joint enterprise between them, must be determined bv their intentions in entering into the agreement to carry it out; for a partnership cannot exist between [197]*197parties unless such was their intention. The usual tests, as has been said, “are community of risks, — mutual though not etpial participation in the profits and losses; but participation in profits alone is not necessarily decisive proof of partnership. There are exceptions to the general rule. A person may be interested in, or receive a part of the profits of a business, without becoming a partner.”—Nelms v. McGraw, 93 Ala. 245. The common undertaking or enterprise in this ease, was' not to realize profits, or in which there was to be a community of profits and loss, and neither party was to contribute to the expenses or losses of the other. They stipulated for the performance of certain acts in a single matter, — that of cutting and marketing certain trees on land, — without expense or cost to each other, further than that all expenses were to be deducted from the proceeds of the sale of the timber; the purpose being to compensate plaintiff for her claim to the land, which she was asserting under a tax deed, and leave the title in the Slaughters unembarrassed by plaintiff’s claim. In other words, it was a purchase by the Slaughters of plaintiff’s title to the land, to, be paid for, bv her cutting certain trees therefrom and selling the same, dividing the proceeds of sale between herself and the Slaughters, after she had paid all expenses of cutting and marketing the timber. This was her compensation for yielding her title. The general rule is, as was said in Nelm’s case, supra, that sharing in the profits as a mode of compensation for property furnished, does not constitute a. partnership between the contracting parties, and that a provision in an agreement, that the proceeds of tlie lumber were to be divided, after paying the expenses of hauling and loading on the cars, — the freight charges, and other expense of selling, — was not- sufficient of itself to constitute the parties partners.—Moore v. Smith, 19 Ala. 774; Fail v. McRee, 36 Ala. 61; Pulliam v. Schimpf, 100 Ala. 362.

3. The evidence shows, that T. H. Boyles, plaintiff’s agent, and Howard Slaughter, representing the Slaughters, entered into an arrangement with a Mr. Feist to supply them with groceries needed for laborers in [198]*198getting the timber out from the lands. Mr. Feist was examined by defendant, and as to this testified, “that (he), tlie witness, furnished groceries to Messrs. Boyles & Slaughter to supply them in getting out timber from the lands which were the subject matter of litigation between Messrs. Slaughter and Mrs. Boyles; that Mr. Boyles told the witness that he would send some orders there, he and Slaughter, and to fill the 'orders; that Mr. Boydes and Mr. Howard Slaughter came to his place of business to make the arrangement in regard to, it, and that, on that occasion told the witness that he (Boydes) and Mr. Slaughter were going to get out some cypress which was the subject matter of the litigation between the Slaughters and Mrs. Boydes, and he would send some orders, either he or Howard Slaughter, either one; that he sub-■seciuently received some orders, but he could not tell how many; that the orders were destroyed, all of them but one;” that the one not destroyed read: “Mr. Feist: Let John Tunstall have one dollar in trade, and charge to Slaughter & Boyles. Oct. 9. 99. T. H. Boyles.”

Mr. Boydes 'testified for plaintiff, that he made arrangements with Howard Slaughter by which he was; to get out the timber from the lands; that he bought goods from Mr. Feist, during the time that he was getting out these timbers and gave the hands orders on him for the goods purchased to be charged to Slaughter and Boydes; that he went to Mr: Feist’s 'store in company with Mr. Howard Slaughter and 'Stated to him, that he was making arrangements' to get out this cypress; that he told him that Messrs: Slaughter and Boydes, or Messrs. Slaughter and his; witness’, wife, were going to get out some timber, but did not tell him they were partners; that Mr. Feist knew that Slaughters and he had compromised their pending litigation, and the account was just for the orders to hands that were working on that particular cypress; for the expense of getting it out, etc.

While the use of the name Slaughter & Boyles might,, ordinarily, tend to show a partnership, yet it is manifest, from the Undisputed evidence, that as used in this instance it was merely for the purpose of identification [199]*199of the particular transaction to which it had reference, and was used simply as a means of keeping an account of the expenses for getting out the timber, so far as paying the hands off in money or supplies went.

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Bluebook (online)
129 Ala. 192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gulf-city-shingle-manufacturing-co-v-boyles-ala-1900.