Lovejoy v. Spafford

93 U.S. 430, 23 L. Ed. 851, 3 Otto 430, 1876 U.S. LEXIS 1954
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedNovember 13, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 93 U.S. 430 (Lovejoy v. Spafford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lovejoy v. Spafford, 93 U.S. 430, 23 L. Ed. 851, 3 Otto 430, 1876 U.S. LEXIS 1954 (1876).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Hunt

delivered the opinion of the court.

The action was.by,the holder of two drafts dated Sept. 27, 1870, drawn by. J. B. Shaw upon J. B. Shaw & Co., and accepted .in the name of J. B. Shaw & Co. The object of the action was to charge Lovejoy as a partner. The firm of J. B. Shaw & Co. was formed on the fifteenth day of April, 1868; transacted a lumber business at Davenport, Iowa; and continued until the twelfth day of May, 1870, when it was dissolved by an instrument in writing. In fact, Lovejoy was not a member of the firm of J. B. Shaw & Co., nor was there in existence such a firm when the drafts were' accepted in its name. .The acceptance in the firm name was a fraud on the part of Shaw.

The questions arising upon the bill of exceptions, grow out of the sufficiency of the notice of the' dissolution of the firm given by the retiring member.

Formal notice was given to all those who had previously dealt, with the firm. It does not appear whether there had been any change of signs, nor whether, the firm had any external sign.

No evidence was given that notice of the dissolution was pub *435 lished in any newspaper; and it was proved that two daily papers were published in Davenport at the time of the dissolution. After that time the business was carried on in the name of J. B. Shaw alone.

Prior to the present transaction, the plaintiffs, in discounting its paper, had heard of the firm, and who were its members. They testified that they had no information of the dissolution till some time after its occurrence.

The drafts in suit were given for lumber sold by the plaintiffs and by one Mead, were drawn by Shaw, and accepted by him in the name of the firm at Read’s Landing, where the lumber was sold..

There was no evidence that.the firm had ever had any other transaction at Eau Claire or Read’s Landing.

No evidence was given of the relative position of the places in question; but from the maps and gazetteers we' learn that Eau Claire is in the interior of the State of Wisconsin, and distant several hundred miles from Davenport, in the State of Iowa. Read’s Landing is not far from Eau Claire.

The case was tried by the Circuit Court, upon the theory, that to discharge a member of a firm from the claim of one who had had no dealing with it prior to its dissolution, but who knew of its existence and who were its members, it was necessary that the latter should have received actual notice of the dissolution, or that notice should have been published in a newspaper at the place of business. This doctrine was not announced in terms, but such was the result of the trial. Either of these notices was held to' be sufficient; but it was held that, without one of them, the retiring, member could not protect himself. In terms, the holding of the judge was, that there must be either actual notice or public notice'; and it will be seen .from the offers and exclusions presently to be stated, that this public notice could mean only a newspaper publication. ' .

Thus the witness Barnard, after testifying that he had been in business at Davenport prior to May 12,1870, until the time of the trial; that he had business relations with all the lumber dealers at -that place, and knew them all; and that he knew of the' dissolution when it occurred, — was then asked whether or *436 not- it was generally known at Davenport at the time the firm was clissolved that such dissolution had taken place.

To which the plaintiffs objected, on the ground that the same was incompetent and immaterialwhich objection was sustained, and the defendant Lovejoy excepted, and his exception was noted.

. Defendants’ counsel then asked the witness: “ State whether or not it. was generally known at this time along the river that this, dissolution had taken place.”

To which plaintiffs made the same objections as before; and the objection'was sustained, and an-exception taken by defendant Lovejoy,'and noted.

Defendants’ counsel then- asked the witness : “ Did you at or near the time t>f the dissolution communicate the fact that it had occurred to any persons other than the plaintiffs; and, if so, to whom, and in what manner ? ”

To which the plaintiff's made the same objection as before; which objection was sustained, and an exception was taken and noted for the defendant Lovejoy..

Counsel for defendant Lovejoy stated, in connection with the questions to the witness Barnard, that he did not expect to prove actual notice of the dissolution to the plaintiffs, or to the. persons who sold the lumber.

John C. Spetzler was sworn as a witness in behalf of the defendant,, and testified that in May, 1870, he was in the employment of J. B. Shaw & Co., in their yard at Davenport, as salesman; that the business'was conducted after the dissolution by Shaw, in the name of J. B. Shaw.

The defendant proposed to prove by the witness that the dissolution, immediately upon its occurrence, was a matter of general repute and knowledge in the city of Davenport, where the firm did business, and that all lumber dealers in Davenport, were informed of it.

To which plaintiff objected, on the grounds that the same was" incompetent and immaterial; which objection was sustained; To which the defendant Lovejoy excepted, and his exception was noted.

Sumner W. Fárnham, not a partner, was sworn on behalf of the .defendant, and testified, that, in September, 1870, and *437 before tbe transaction in question, he visited Eau Claire in company with J. B. Shaw; was there two or three days, and called on the lumber dealers of that place. The witness was then' asked whether on that occasion he or Shaw gave any notice to the lumber dealers at Eau Claire of the dissolution of the firm of J. B. Shaw & Co. If so, to whom, and in what manner ?

To which the plaintiffs objected, on the grounds that the same was incompetent and immaterial, unless the defendant proposed to prove actual notice to plaintiffs, or to those who -sold the lumber, or notice by publication in a newspaper. The objection was sustained by the court; and the defendant Love-joy excepted, and his exception was noted.

The defendant then offered to prove by this witness, that, while he and Shaw were át Eau Claire on this occasion, and before the sale of the rafts in question, the said Shaw,' 'in the presence of the witness, notified all, or nearly all, of the lumber dealers in Eau Claire, where plaintiffs then lived and did business, and in the vicinity, that the firm of J. B. Shaw & Co. had dissolved, and that Farnham & Co. had sold out to Shaw.

To which' the plaintiffs objected, on the grounds that the same was immaterial and incompetent, unless the defendant proposes to show actual notice to the plaintiffs, or to those who sold the lumber; which objection was sustained, and the defendant Lovejoy excepted, and his exception was noted.

In Pratt v. Page, 32 Vt. 11, cited as an important case, it was held, that, to entitle a plaintiff to recover in a case like the present, these facts must appear: • 1.

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Bluebook (online)
93 U.S. 430, 23 L. Ed. 851, 3 Otto 430, 1876 U.S. LEXIS 1954, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lovejoy-v-spafford-scotus-1876.