Locke v. Lewis

124 Mass. 1, 1878 Mass. LEXIS 213
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJanuary 1, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 124 Mass. 1 (Locke v. Lewis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Locke v. Lewis, 124 Mass. 1, 1878 Mass. LEXIS 213 (Mass. 1878).

Opinion

Gray, C. J.

This case presents an important question of the law of partnership, which has been several times argued, and has received great consideration from the court. The apparent conflict in the cases cited at the bar, changes in the court, doubts entertained by some of the judges, the consequent necessity of [5]*5making a full examination of the authorities upon the subject, and the pressure of other duties, have delayed the judgment to the present time.

The case, briefly stated, is as follows: It is replevin of three carriages. In September, 1870, a copartnership previously existing between the plaintiff and Isaiah L. Robinson and his son Daniel C. Robinson, in the business of manufacturing carriages at Nashua in the State of New Hampshire, was dissolved, the plaintiff left the firm, and the Robinsons gave him their promissory note for the balance of his unpaid interest therein, and formed a new firm under the style of I. L. Robinson & Son, and continued the business at the same place. In October, 1870, the two Robinsons farmed a limited partnership, under the laws of New Hampshire, under the name of I. L. Robinson & Co., with Chase, Parkinson and Greeley, in which the Robinsons were general partners and the other three were special partners. In February, 1871, the Robinsons sold the carriages in question to the plaintiff in payment of their note to him, and he gave the note .up to them. The plaintiff’s testimony tended to show that he bought the carriages in good faith, that he thought two of them were the same that the old firm had on hand when he sold out to the Robinsons, and that he did not know that the limited partnership existed or was carrying on business, or that any one but the Robinsons had any interest in the carriages sold to him. The defendant, a deputy sheriff, afterwards attached the carriages on mesne process against all the partners in the limited partnership. The report assumes that the carriages were part of the stock in trade of this partnership; and the single question reserved for our determination is of the correctness of the ruling, under which a verdict was ordered for the defendant, and which was, in substance, that the sale by the two general partners, in payment of their own debt, of goods which were in fact goods of the partnership, but were not known to the creditor to be such, was void as against the partnership and its creditors.

The general partners were clothed not only with apparent, but with actual authority to sell the property in question. “ The law treats each partner,” says Mr. Justice Story in his Commentaries, “ as possessing a dominion over the entirety of the prop[6]*6erty, and not merely over his own share, and therefore as clothed with all the ordinary attributes of ownership. This doctrine indeed seems indispensable to the security and convenience of the public, as well as to the facility of transacting commercial business.” Story Part. § 94. And he quotes, in this connection, from Chancellor Kent: “ With respect to the power of each partner over the partnership property, it is settled that each one in ordinary cases, and in the absence of fraud on the part of the purchaser, has the complete jus disponendi of the whole partnership interests, and is considered to be the authorized agent of the firm.” 3 Kent Com. 44. So Chief Justice Marshall says: “ It will be readily conceded that a fraudulent sale, whether made by deed or otherwise, would pass nothing to a vendee concerned in the fraud. But, with this exception, I feel much difficulty in setting any other limits to the power of a partner, in disposing of the effects of the company, purchased for sale.” Anderson v. Tompkins, 1 Brock. 456, 460.

As between the partners themselves, one partner has no right to bind the partnership, except within the scope of the business of ■ the firm. He has no right to give a note or other obligation of the partnership, or to release a debt due to the partnership, or to appropriate property of the partnership, in payment of a private debt of his own,' without the assent of his copartners. But their right to avoid the transaction, as against the creditor, depends upon the questions whether the latter had knowledge or notice of the true state of the case, whether there was fraud or negligence on his part, and whether the copartners held out the active partner as authorized to deal with the property as his own.

If one partner delivers a promissory note or bill of exchange of the partnership in payment of his private debt, the very form of the note or bill usually gives the creditor notice that it is a security of the partnership, and throws upon him the burden of showing that the other partners authorized or assented to what, without proof of such authority or assent, appears to be a misappropriation of the partnership funds. So if one partner releases a debt of the partnership in payment of a private debt of his own, the other party has like notice. So if property, applied by one partner in payment of his private debt, is known [7]*7by the creditor to belong to the partnership, such creditor cannot hold it against the partnership, without proof that the other partners authorized or ratified such appropriation.

But if the private creditor has no knowledge that the property belongs to the partnership, and the partnership has entrusted its property to one partner in such a manner as to enable him to deal with it as his own, and to induce the public to believe it to be his, then the other partners fall within the rule that when one of two innocent persons must suffer, that one must suffer who by his acts or conduct has afforded the means of committing the fraud. To hold a sale or a contract by the ostensible partners to be absolutely void, for abuse of authority by them, so as to confer no title and no rights upon a person dealing with them in good faith, within the apparent scope of their authority and right, with no knowledge of any abuse thereof, would be to apply to partners, having both title and authority ample for the purpose, a stricter and narrower rule than is applied to an ordinary agent exercising a bare authority without interest.

All the authorities agree that when a person, entrusted with goods as agent, sells them to one, who has no knowledge that he is agent, but is led to believe, from the manner in which he has been allowed to deal with the goods, that they are his, the other party to the transaction may set off against the principal a debt of the agent. Rabone v. Williams, 7 T. R. 360 note. George v. Clagett, 7 T. R. 359. Semenza v. Brinsley, 18 C. B. (N. S.) 467. Turner v. Thomes, L. R. 6 C. P. 610, 613. Ex parte Dixon, 4 Ch. D. 133. Kelley v Munson, 7 Mass. 319, 324. Lime Rock Bank v. Plimpton, 17 Pick. 159. Calais Steamboat Co. v. Scudder, 2 Black, 372. The same rule has been applied, in a series of English decisions, to partnerships, whether for general business or in a single adventure.

The earliest case reported was assumpsit by Stacey, Ross and others against Decy for goods sold and delivered. The plaintiffs were in partnership as grocers, but Ross appeared to the public to be the only person interested in the business. The defendant, having dealt with Ross for the partnership goods, for the price of which the action was brought, and having expended money on the private account of Ross to a greater amount, was allowed to rely on this by way of set-off; Lord Kenyon saying, “ The [8]

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Bluebook (online)
124 Mass. 1, 1878 Mass. LEXIS 213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/locke-v-lewis-mass-1878.