Hopkins v. Adey

50 L.R.A. 498, 48 A. 41, 92 Md. 1, 1900 Md. LEXIS 8
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 16, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 50 L.R.A. 498 (Hopkins v. Adey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hopkins v. Adey, 50 L.R.A. 498, 48 A. 41, 92 Md. 1, 1900 Md. LEXIS 8 (Md. 1900).

Opinion

McSherry-, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court:

In effect the contention on the record before us is, that in the Court below the case presented two opposite theories, only one of which was allowed to be considered by the jury. This is the foundation of the alleged reversible errors. The suit was *3 upon a promissory note. The note bears date September the 9th, 1896, and reads: “Twelve months after-date I promise to pay to the order of Mattie Adams two thousand dollars at six per cent interest, value received,” and is signed by L. K. Wright. On its back the name of the appellant, Gideon P. Hopkins, is written. Hopkins was sued as a co-maker. The defense set up by him is two-fold. First, that he was in fact an indorser, and was understood by the payee, the maker and himself, to be such ; that the note was not presented for payment at maturity, and was not protested whereby he was released from liability. Secondly, that the payee and the maker Wright were co-partners in business when the note was made, and that the money was borrowed from one partner by the other for the specific purpose of being used in paying off the debts of the firm, and that it was so used to the extent of some eighteen hundred dollars; and that inasmuch as the money was applied in extinguishment of obligations for the payment of which the payee was no less liable than the maker Wright, the former cannot recover from the latter, or what is the same thing, from the other maker Hopkins, the amount so paid; because to the extent that the proceeds of the note were applied towards paying the firm’s liabilities they were applied in extinguishing the payee’s own debts, and there was consequently no consideration to support the promise of either of the makers. In answer to this contention it was insisted by the appellee that the co-partnership between herself and Wright had been dissolved before the date of the note and before the borrowing of the money, and that the money had not been borrowed for the purpose of paying off debts of the firm.

■ The first ground of defense — the relation of Hopkins to the note — whether that, of co-maker or indorser — went fairly to the jury under the instructions granted, and upon this appeal we have nothing to do with that aspect of the case. The second ground of defense gave rise to. the two opposite theories which have been indicated. By excluding proffered evidence, by striking out some which had been admitted subject to exception, and by rejecting several prayers which the *4 defendants presented for instructions to the jury, the theory upon which the appellants relied was completely eliminated. If the theory of the appellants contained a correct and an applicable legal principle, and if there was evidence which tended to support that theory the refusal to let the jury pass upon the facts, under appropriate instructions upon the law, was error. So in the end, the nine bills of exception embody the single inquiry as to whether the theory upon which the appellants insist is tenable. To answer that inquiry intelligently a brief outline of the case must now be given.

There is a distinct conflict between the chief witnesses upon two points which will be adverted to in a moment. What is beyond dispute is this : The appellee and Wright, who was her brother-in-law, were engaged in business as co-partners, whilst the appellee was a single woman. They ultimately dissolved the partnership, and Wright bought out the interest of Miss Adams for twenty-five hundred dollars, payable in ten equal annual instalments of two hundred and fifty dollars each. The appellee loaned to Wright, on the faith of the note sued on, the sum of two thousand dollars, but whether this was done before or after the dissolution is one of the disputed points, and the other is as to whether the appellee knew that the money borrowed from her was to be applied to the payment of debts for which she, as a member of the firm, was equally bound with Wright. It is immaterial which version of these contested points is the correct one as will appear later on. A written agreement of dissolution was put in evidence. It bears date September the 1st, 1896, but was not signed until October the 1 oth. Wright testified that the latter date was the actual date of the dissolution, though because the matter had been previously discussed the paper was dated back to September the 1st.

It is obvious, if this account be true, the partnership was in existence when the two thousand dollars were borrowed on September the 9th ; and it is equally obvious, if the dissolution took place on September the 1st, though the formal agreement was not signed until October the 10th, there was no *5 partnership existing as between the parties when the note of September the 9th was delivered. Wright testified that he told the appellee the two thousand dollars were to be applied to the payment of the firm’s debts, and he adduced evidence tending to show that the fund had been so applied, whilst the appellee testified that he told her he needed the money in Ms business.

Of course, if the loan was made after the dissolution, and after Wright had purchased the interest of Miss Adams, the defense founded on the view that the loan was a transaction between partners in respect to partnership business must fail on the facts. But upon the hypothesis that the firm had not been dissolved until October the 10th, and therefore not until after the money had been loaned by the appellee on the note in suit, and upon the further hypothesis that the appellee knew the money was to be applied, and that it was applied to the payment of debts for which she as a member of the firm was equally liable with Wright, what legal standing, ask the appellants, would the appellee have to recover the money from Wright or from Hopkins who received no part of it and was in no way benefited by the loan ?

The argument is that as both Miss Adams and Mr. Wright were, in the capacity of co-partners, bound to pay the debts due by the firm, her loan of her own money, which was not partnership assets, to him for the purpose of being use.d in paying those debts created no liability on his part to her; because the money was applied in satisfaction of the obligations for which both were responsible. But this is obviously fallacious. In the first place it overlooks the principle that partnership property is primarily liable for partnership debts, whilst the separate property of a partner is not liable for the firm’s debts until his individual creditors are paid and the firm’s assets are exhausted; and it ignores the fact that there was, when the note was given, largely more partnership assets, according to Wright’s own testimony, than were needed to pay all partnership liabilities. And, in the second place, it disregards the equally well-settled principle that one partner *6 may make a valid contract with another which can be enforced in a Court of law. Miss Adams was under no duty, moral or legal, to use her separate property in paying the debts of the firm so long as the firm’s assets were sufficient to pay them.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
50 L.R.A. 498, 48 A. 41, 92 Md. 1, 1900 Md. LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hopkins-v-adey-md-1900.