Halliday v. McDougall

22 Wend. 264
CourtCourt for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors
DecidedDecember 15, 1839
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 22 Wend. 264 (Halliday v. McDougall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Halliday v. McDougall, 22 Wend. 264 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1839).

Opinion

.After advisement the following opinions were delivered :

By the Chancellor.

I have no doubt of the correctness of the decision Of the supreme court, that general reputation alone is not sufficient to establish a copartnership, so as to charge the supposed members of the firm with the payment of its debts; and if the decission of this case turn-ad upon that question, I should have no difficulty in affirming the judgment of that court, by which the judgment of the superior court of the city of New-York, in favor of the present plaintiff -in error, was reversed. Proof of general -reputation, which is sometimes received in such cases in .connection with other evidence, certainly is no proof of the ¡fact of the copartnership as against the reputed members of the firm who reside at a distance, and where the jury cannot fairly infer from the other circumstances in the case •that those persons actually knew they were held out to the world as such copartners. And if the object in this case had been to render Wightman, who lived at Charleston, liable to the plaintiff for the debt contracted by the New-York firm,-this evidence of general reputation at New-York, of which he could not be presumed to know any thing, the judge who tried the cause, -would unquestionably have told the jury to lay it entirely out of view in considering the -question of his liability, in the same manner as he told them [270]*270to lay out of view the reputation prevailing there before McDougall arrived, in determining the question whether he had made himself liable for the debts of the firm by suffering himself to be held out to the world as a partner.

Where an .action is brought against several persons as joint debtors, all<of whom appear and deny their joint,indebtedness, the plaintiff is obliged to make out by legal .evidence against each, not only that he is personally liable for the debt, but also that he :is jointly liable with all his .co-defendants^ but when part of the defendants admit their individual and joint liability, either by their pleadings or otherwise, or where they are outlawed or proceeded against as absentees by a return of the capias by the sheriff as to them not found, so that, no personal judgment can be rendered in tire suit against them or their individual property,the plaintiff is only obliged to produce evidence which will be sufficient as against those who appear and defend the suit, to establish their joint liability with their co-defendants. In such cases, therefore, the acts and admissions of the parties who thus appear and defend, are legal evidence as against themselves, not only of their own indebtedness but also of their joint-indebtedness with their co-defendants. Thus, in the case of Sangster v. Mazaredo and others, 1 Stark. R. 161, where a suit was brought against four persons as copartners and acceptors of several bills of exchange, and three of the defendants who resided in a foreign country had been proceeded against to. outlawry, and the fourth who had been personally served with process appeared and defended the suit, Lord Ellenborough held that the admissions of the defendant who had appeared, that he was a copartner with the three absentees, were sufficient to entitle the plaintiff to a verdict; and as our statute, authorizing a proceeding aganist joint debtors upon a service of process on a part of them only, is a mere substi~ .tute for the English proceeding to outlawry against the absentees, and the record of the judgment, will not be evidence of a joint liability in any subsequent suit against the defendants who have not been served with process, the decision in Sangster v. Mazaredo and others, is directly ap[271]*271plicable to the case now under consideration. Indeed, the same point was substantially decided, under our statute, by the supreme court, in the case of Whitney v. Sterling and others, 14 Johns. R. 215, although the legal effect of a joint judgment upon the rights of the absentee had not then been settled.- The court say, in that case“ Hunter and' Sterling the defendants who had appeared, cannot complain, because the testimony fully establishes their confessions that the firm of Hunter, Sterling & Co. was composed of the four defendants.” I- may also remark, that it is a matter of course, in a proceeding against joint debtors or copartners under the statute, where the instrument declared on is a promissory note or bill of exchange, to have the clerk assess the damages and enter a joint judgment against all the defendants, upon the implied- admission of the one who has been served with process, of their joint indebtedness. The question, therefore, .whether the evidence of general reputation alone was suffix dent to charge Wightman as a copartner did not arise in the' ease;- and the defendant’s counsel had no right to call upon the court to charge the jury on that subject.

As against MeDougatt, the defendant here brought into court, there was sufficient evidence to authorize the jurj to find that he had made himself liable to the plaintiff as a co-partner in both firms, independent of any evidence as to-general reputation. His-own witnesses who were examined in England, and who knew the agreement under which he came out, prove that Ansley represented himself and Wightman as composing the firm of John D. Ansley &f Co.; and it was with them, and them alone, that he was to go into copartnership, if with any body, as the written agreement shows; and immediately upon his arrival at New-York, where the other branch of the house- was to be established, he found his name over the door as- one of the members of the firm. He suffered himself to be introduced as a partner, and remained there until the concern exploded, without taking any steps to have his name removed from the sign over the door, or to inform those who were dealing with the house that he was not a copartner. Under such circumstances, although as between him and Ansley and Wight-[272]*272man, he had a right to elect at the end of the year whether he would take a salary or a share of the profits of the partnership, he was clearly a partner as to the rest of the world} who knew nothing of this private arrangement between the-individuals wha were held out to'the public as copartners by these introductions and by the sign over the door.

As the drawers and acceptors of the bills- in this case were-the same persons, or at least, as there is not a shadow of doubt that Ansley was a member of both firms-, the refusal-of the firm in Charleston to pay the bills was* notice of' their dishonor to him, and,- fr course, to the New-York firm. Gowan v. Jackson, 20 Johns. R. 176. Johnson on Bills, 23. It is therefore unnecessary to inquire whether the statement in the protest of the deceased notary was of itself sufficient evidence of notice of the1 dishonor of the bills; And it* now appears- to be settled', noth withstanding the dictum of Mr. Justice Van Ness in Miller v. Hackley, 5 Johns. R. 375, that a- bill of exchange drawn in one state of the union and payable in another, is a foreign bill, within the meaning of the rule which makes the notarial protest prima-Jade evidence of the' presentment and- dishonor of sucli bills. Buckner v. Finley, 2 Peters’ R. 586, and other cases cited in-opinion of Justice Cowen- See also Johnson on Bills, 31, and Muir on Bills, 52, as to bills drawn between England- and Scotland and Ireland-

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Bluebook (online)
22 Wend. 264, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/halliday-v-mcdougall-nycterr-1839.