Johnson v. J. J. Douglass Co.

1899 OK 77, 58 P. 743, 8 Okla. 594, 1899 Okla. LEXIS 105
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedAugust 24, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 1899 OK 77 (Johnson v. J. J. Douglass Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson v. J. J. Douglass Co., 1899 OK 77, 58 P. 743, 8 Okla. 594, 1899 Okla. LEXIS 105 (Okla. 1899).

Opinion

Opinion of the court by

Irwin, J.:

The only error assigned and relied upon by the plaintiff in error for a reversal of the judgment is that the court below erred in taking the matter from the jury, and sustaining the motion of the plaintiff in the court below for a judgment on the pleadings. The Statutes of Oklahoma (section 4726, Statutes. 1893,) provide:

“ In an action, allegations of the execution of a written instrument and the endorsements thereon, of the exist *596 ence of a corporation or partnership, or any appointment or authority, or the correctness of an account duly verified by the affidavit or affirmation of the party, his agent or attorney, shall be taken as true, unless the denial of the same is verified by affidavit of the opposing party, his agent or attorney.”

This statute was adopted from the Kansas Code, and by its adoption was accepted subject to any and all constructions which had been put upon it by the supreme court of that state prior to its adoption by the Territory. The supreme court of that state, in the case of Ciesielski v. Nowacki, reported in 18 Pac. 233, held that: “ In an action commenced before a justice of the peace, in which an answer is filed setting up a partnership between the parties, and judgment is asked thereon, and where no reply or other denial under oath is filed, and the action is tried without objection, and as if said partnership was in issue, the want of said verified reply was waived.”

But it is here urged that as the partnership set up in the bill of particulars, and in the Kansas case it was in the answer, the rule should be different. But we are unable to distinguish the difference. In either case the requirement was the same, to-wit, a denial under oath, and in either case it was a right which the-party could waive; and we take it that this construction of tne statute having been made prior to the time of the adoption by the legislature of this Territory of the statute in question, and being the recognized construction of that statute by the supreme court of Kansas at the time of its adoption, it is binding upon the court, as we think the facts in the case at bar and the case cited In the Pacific Reporter are, in principle, identical.

*597 In this case, the bill of particulars was filed in the justice’s court, containing the allegation of partnership. No verified denial was filed, and the case proceeded in the justice’s court to a final judgment, and an appeal was perfected to the district court. No other or different bill of particulars was filed, and no verified denial was placed on file by the defendant, his agent or attorney. The plaintiff introduced evidence tending not only to prove the purchase and delivery of the goods in question, and to substantiate and sustain this account, but also introduced proof tending to prove the existence of the partnership between the defendants, Harding and Johnson. By introducing evidence to prove facts and circumstances from which a partnership between the defendants might be legally implied, it is clearly shown that it was not the intention of the plaintiff to rely upon the fact that defendant had not legally denied the allegation of partnership contained in the bill of particulars. If the plaintiff had not intended to waive its right to demand a verdict on the pleadings because the defendant had not filed his verified denial, it could have made the motion before introducing any evidence; but, on the contrary, the plaintiff in the court below did not take this course, but elected to introduce evidence to the jury to prove this fact, and when the plaintiff rested the defendant went on without objection to introduce evidence tending to deny the existence of the partnership alleged in the bill of particular's.

Thus the issue was .squarely joined between the parties, and evidence introduced by both sides, and the case tried as though the question of partnership was in issue, thus bringing the case squarely within the lines of the Kan- *598 «as case; and we think, under the authority in that case, there is no doubt that this point, upon which the plaintiff might at one time have relied, was waived in- the court below. This being true, the next question is, was the court below warranted in instructing the jury to find a verdict for the plaintiff?

In the case of Keokuk Falls Imp. Co. v. Kingsland Douglas Mfg. Co., 5 Okla. 32, 47 Pac. 484, this court has clearly indicated in what cases the court might properly direct a verdict; that is, where only questions of law are to be determined, and in oases where suit is on promissory note, where the ownership is undenied. Now, this case is certainly not of the latter class, and the question is, is it of the former, to-wit, a case where only a pure, simple question of law is involved? Because if it is- a mixed question of law and fact, the jury mot having been waived, the defendant is entitled to the verdict of a jury. Were the pleading© in this case in that condition that only a legal question, pure and simple, was to be determined? If so, then the trial court was justified in directing the verdict; otherwise, not.

The question of what constitutes a partnership is largely a question of law, but the decision of this legal proposition involves the decision of questions which are purely questions of fact. Parsons, in his work on Contracts (volume 1 [8th Ed.] p. 148,) says: “A partnership exists when two or more person© combine their property, labor, and skill, or one or more of them, in the transaction of business.” The same author say©: “ It is often said that whether persons who engage in joint transactions are partners or not depends upon their intentions', but *599 it must be remembered that by this is meant their -intentions as legally expressed and -ascertained.” The question of whether or not a partnership exists is not always dependent upon the personal arrangement or understanding of the parties. Where men so act as to induce an honest belief in the public mind that they are partners, .and when they deliberately hold themselves out to the world as partners, and obtain credit thereby, the law will often imply that they are partners, and hold them accountable as such. Now, in each particular case, where it is sought to establish an implied partnership it must depend largely on its own facts and surroundings to determine the question; and when this is the case the court can very properly regulate the question by instruction. He can properly instruct the jury that, if they believe or find from the evidence that certain facts and circumstances exist, then, as a matter of law, a legal partnership is established. But we do not think the court should have the right to usurp the province of a jury, and take from them the decision of a question of fact on which the case rests, especially where there i® a clear and well-defined conflict of evidence. To° permit courts to do this would be to abrogate the trial by jury, .and to deprive litigants of their constitutional rights.

In the case of City of Atchison v. Jansen, 21 Kan.

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Bluebook (online)
1899 OK 77, 58 P. 743, 8 Okla. 594, 1899 Okla. LEXIS 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-j-j-douglass-co-okla-1899.