Hely v. Hinerman

236 S.W. 698, 208 Mo. App. 691, 1922 Mo. App. LEXIS 173
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 14, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 236 S.W. 698 (Hely v. Hinerman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hely v. Hinerman, 236 S.W. 698, 208 Mo. App. 691, 1922 Mo. App. LEXIS 173 (Mo. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

FARRINGTON, J.

— The plaintiff brought suit to recover the material which he alleged was sold to the *695 Hinerman Construction Company, a concern engaged in the paving business, and at the time these goods were sold was operating in paving streets in Caruthersville, Missouri. It is admitted that Hinerman, Coffman and Cope were members of the firm of Hinerman Construction Company.

The principal issue in this case, touching both questions of fact and law, was whether H. M. Smith, the respondent here, was a member of the firm of Hinerman Construction Company. The cause was tried in the circuit court of Greene county and a judgment rendered in favor of Smith, and it is from this judgment that the appeal is brought here.

The assignments made in the brief go to questions of error concerning the exclusion and admissibility of testimony, the giving and refusing of instructions, and particularly the exclusion of testimony which consisted of acts and declarations and admissions of one Hinerman, who was the active member of the firm of Hinerman Construction Company, engagedin paving the streets of Caruthersville, and the man who had the dealings with the plaintiff here concerning the materials which were bought for the Hinerman Construction Company.

We are convinced that the trial court committed no error in this case, but concede that the question of law which we will discuss in this opinion, is a close question, upon which there is a division of authorities not only in this State but in other jurisdictions. That other matters may be disposed of before touching that question, we are convinced that there was no error in refusing to permit J. H. Hinerman to testify that H. M. Smith was a partner in the Hinerman Construction Company, or when he became a member of the partnership, or if he was a member of the partnership when he signed the note. Rejecting such testimony at most would not be reversible error and the action of the court can be upheld on the ground that it called for legal conclusions. [See Ellis v. Brand, 176 Mo. App. 383, 158 S. W. 705.]

The instructions given in the case fairly present the issues to be determined. We find no reversible error *696 in the instructions given on behalf of Smith. They merely tell the' jury that in order that Smith be held they must find that he became a partner and became liable for material which was purchased by the Hinerman Construction Company after he came into the firm, the theory of plaintiff being that Smith was not originally a member of the firm but came in some time after it had been operating.

Appellant’s two instructions which were refused and about which complaint is made, were merely precautionary instructions, resting largely in the discretion' of the trial court, the refusal of which would not constitute reversible error. [Wiedeman v. St. Louis Taxicab Co., 182 Mo. App. 530, 165 S. W. 1106.]

This brings us to the principal point at issue. The appellant contends that the trial court erred in excluding testimony offered by him in the nature of admissions and declarations made by Hinerman, of the firm of Hinerman Construction Co., which declarations and admissions were made at the time the goods were purchased from plaintiff, and tended to show tliat Smith, respondent here, had become a member of the firm of Hinerman Construction Company and was a full partner therein. It will be borne in mind in dealing with this question that there is no contention but what the Hinerman Construction Company was a partnership and that Hinerman was one of the partners, with full authority to act for it. Neither is there any contention made that the partnership of Hinerman Construction Company purchased the material from the plaintiff and is indebted to the plaintiff for such sum. The only question concerning this issue was whether or not a partnership existed in which H. M. Smith was a member, that is to say, the question is on the existence of the alleged partnership between Hinerman, Coffman, Cope and Smith.

To sustain the issue that Smith was a member of this firm at the time the goods were purchased from plaintiff, the plaintiff’s testimony tended to show that originally a firm composed of Hinerman, Coffman and Cope *697 was formed under the name of Hinerman Construction Company, and, as stated before, this is admitted by all the parties. Hinerman’s testimony in this cause affirmatively shows that Smith came in to the firm of Hinerman Construction Company as a partner to receive profits and bear losses and to share equally with the other partners in the partnership venture. This was the only direct testimony of an affirmative character whicli showed that Smith was a member of the firm. On the other hand, Smith and Coffman testified positively that Smith never became a member of the partnership, and that such dealings as he had with the partnership were merely done to accommodate the partnership, one member of which firm was Coffman, who was associated with Smith in the banking business. The case then stands in this wise: There is direct testimony offered by plaintiff that Smith was a member of the partnership at the time plaintiff sold the goods to the Hinerman Construction Company, or as some courts put it, the plaintiff had made a prima-facie case of the partnership alleged; the defendant’s testimony flatly denied such relation. Now, the appellant contends, that under the authorities, he having introduced evidence of a direct character which made a prima-facie case of the existence of a partnership between Smith and others, he was then entitled to introduce in evidence the declarations and admissions of Hinerman, who was acting for the Hinerman Construction Company at the time the goods were bought, which tended to show that Smith was a partner. In other words, plaintiff sought to show by various witnesses that Hinerman came to them at the time the goods were being purchased and told them that H. M. Smith, of Springfield, Missouri, had come into the partnership and was then a member of the firm. The theory of appellant is that having put in evidence of an affirmative character making a primafacie case of the existence of a partnership, he was then .entitled to bolster up and corroborate Hinerman’s testimony to that effect by showing the declarations which had been made by Hinerman to plaintiff and other parties *698 when the goods were bought. To sustain this contention, the apxjellant undoubtedly has one authority in Missouri directly in point, and with which we are not willing; to agree, and that is the case of Oil Well Supply Co. v. Metcalf, 174 Mo. App. 555, 160 S. W. 897. In that case the Kansas City Court of Appeals upheld the modification of an instruction so as to cut out a direction to the jury that no declaration or act of Ross as to the existence of a partnership should be considered unless such act or declaration was within the knowledge or consent of the other alleged partners, and the court said it is true you cannot prove that a partnership existed by the acts and declarations of the alleged partner, “but if you first make out a prima-facie case, as was done here, that a partnership exists it is then proper, in corroboration, to show that he acted as such and stated that he was.” The cases cited to support that statement we will hereafter notice in this opinion.

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Bluebook (online)
236 S.W. 698, 208 Mo. App. 691, 1922 Mo. App. LEXIS 173, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hely-v-hinerman-moctapp-1922.