Letellier-Phillips Paper Co. v. Fiedler

222 S.W.2d 42, 32 Tenn. App. 137, 1949 Tenn. App. LEXIS 86
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 2, 1949
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 222 S.W.2d 42 (Letellier-Phillips Paper Co. v. Fiedler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Letellier-Phillips Paper Co. v. Fiedler, 222 S.W.2d 42, 32 Tenn. App. 137, 1949 Tenn. App. LEXIS 86 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1949).

Opinion

SWEPSTON, J.

This is an appeal in error by de-defendants below from an adverse verdict and decree for $24,060.74 after a jury trial in the Chancery Court.

The suit is on account for merchandise sold and delivered and the essential question in the trial below was whether there was partnership liability or corporate liability, the partners having operated as such for about a year and having later formed a corporation.

There are eleven assignments of error. Number IY complains of the refusal of the Court to submit certain issues tendered by defendants, while Number V complains of the issues framed and submitted by the Chancellor.

Since the determinative issues of fact in a jury trial are made up from and consonant with the pleadings, we shall abstract briefly the bill and answer herein. Gibson, Sec. 549 et seq.

The bill alleges that about December 24, 1945 complainant agreed to extend credit to defendants, Fiedler & Sullivan, individually and as partners trading as Fied-Sul Paper Mills. That upon the pledge of the individual credit of the defendants complainant began shipping them merchandise.

That the account about January 1, 1947 was current and amounted to $6855.26. That subsequently the balance began to grow larger until on August 1, 1947* it amounted to $26,890.70, which later upon demand was reduced to $24,060.74 at which figure it has remained, because all purchases lately have been for cash.

That about August 1, 1947 complainant learned for the first time that a corporation had been formed by *141 defendants and that it had taken over certain assets of the individuals and of the partnership all without notice to complainant.

That it had never dealt with the corporation and had relied upon the credit of the partnership and the individuals composing it and that said transfer of assets was fraudulent, etc.

The answer in substance denied that credit was extended to the individuals composing the partnership and denied that complainant did not have notice of the formation of the corporation and averred that since its formation, complainants had dealt with it as such; they denied any fraudulent transfer of assets.

On the trial there was evidence to support a verdict for either party.

Defendants tendered the following issue of fact:

“1. Did the complainants or their agent, Mr. Gold-stein, have knowledge or notice of the change from a partnership to a corporation?
“2. Was the balance on the account which the defendants owed as a partnership subsequently paid off in full?”

The- Chancellor refused to submit those issues as not being determinative and submitted the following:

Did the complainant sell and deliver to Fied-Sul Paper Mill, or Fied-Sul Paper Mill, Inc., on credit extended the defendants, Chris H. Fiedler and O. It. Sullivan, individually or as partners, merchandise representing the entire amount of the account sued on in this cause, in the sum of $24,060.74. The answer can be either yes or no. And
“ If you answer Issue No. 1, no, then answer on what date did complainant cease to sell on credit of *142 defendants, C. K. Sullivan and Claris H. Fiedler. And tliat can be answered by days.”

Along with, the issues submitted he charged the jury fully as follows:

“Of course, if you answer Issue No. i, yes, you need not answer Issue No. 2 at all; if you answer Issue No. 1, no, then you take up and reach the answer for No. 2; and the Court charges you that the burden of proof is on the complainant with reference to Issue No. 1. The burden of proof is on the defendants with reference to Issue No. 2, if you get to it.
“Now, the burden of proof, gentlemen, in a lawsuit never changes; whoever has the burden of proof at the start of the lawsuit continues to carry that burden all the way through, and the complainants in this cause claim the personal liability of the defendants, Fiedler and Sullivan, and therefore the burden of proof is on them. The burden of going forward with the evidence does shift in a lawsuit; and in this case that is applicable with reference to the contention that is made that the credit ceases to be extended to the individuals or partners, and that thereafter it is extended to the corporation, Fied-Sul Paper Mill, Inc.; and the burden of going forward with the evidence to show the jury that the complainants did have knowledge and notice of the existence of the corporation and that they no longer had the right to rely on the credit of the individuals, Fiedler and Sullivan, does shift to the defendants; and they claim that it occurred on or about December 23rd, 1946, whereas the complainants claim it didn’t occur until along in August, 1947.
“Now, the materiality of that, gentlemen, is not as to when the corporation was organized or whether the complainants had knowledge or notice of the organization *143 of that corporation; the materiality is, when was the partnership dissolved, and when was knowledge and notice of that dissolution of the partnership brought home to the complainants?
“Now, we have in Tennessee, what is known as the Uniform Partnership Law; it is a law that has been enacted in a large number of the 48 states of the Union, and has been the law of this State since the year 1917, which carried forward into the Code of Tennessee, enacted in 1931, effective January 1st, 1932; and the Court will read to you what the statutory provisions on that subject are, as taken from the Uniform Partnership Act, and will charge you that the same are applicable, too, with the facts of the case at bar. The Statute of this State says with reference to interpretation of knowledge and notice:
“ ‘7842. A person has “knowledge” of a fact within the meaning of this chapter not only when he has actual knowledge thereof, but also when he has knowledge of such other facts as in the circumstances shows bad faith.
“ ‘ A person has “notice” of a fact within the meaning of this chapter when the person, who claims the benefit of the notice, (a) states the fact to such person, or (b) delivers through the mail, or by other means of communication, a written statement of the fact to such person or to a proper person as his place of business or residence.’
“Another section of that same Act, Section 7874 of the Code of Tennessee, under the heading ‘Power of partner to bind partnership to third person after dissolution’ :
“ ‘ After dissolution a partner can bind the partnership except as provided in paragraph 3, (a) . . .’ *144 And with reference to that, the Court will charge you that 3 (a) has nothing to do with the facts of this case and therefore can be ignored; that is the exception, and it is therefore no exception in this case.
“ ‘After dissolution a partner can bind the partnership . . .

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
222 S.W.2d 42, 32 Tenn. App. 137, 1949 Tenn. App. LEXIS 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/letellier-phillips-paper-co-v-fiedler-tennctapp-1949.