Merchants' National Bank v. Little

4 Ohio C.C. 195
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedSeptember 15, 1889
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Ohio C.C. 195 (Merchants' National Bank v. Little) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Merchants' National Bank v. Little, 4 Ohio C.C. 195 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1889).

Opinion

Shauck, J.

That an appeal may be taken to this court from the final judgment of the Court of Common Pleas, in an action like this, does not seem doubtful. Section five thousand two hundred and twenty-six of the Revised Statutes provides for the [198]*198appeal from judgments rendered by the Court of Common Pleas in civil actions of which it had original jurisdiction, if the right to demand a jury therein did not exist. Suits in equity to estaijjish the right to participate in trust funds were .well known prior to the adoption of our code of civil procedure, and the civil action of the code is a substitute for all such judicial proceedings as were previously known either as actions at law or suits in equity.” Chinn v. The Trustees, 32 Ohio St. 236.

The cases in which a jury may be demanded as of right are defined in section five thousand one hundred and thirty of the Revised Statutes. They are for the trial of “ issues of fact arising in actions for the recovery of money only, or specific real or personal- property.” This is not either in form or in substance an action for the recovery of money. The court can not enforce its judgment by execution. It can-not determine the amount of money the plaintiff is to receive. It can adjudge only that he is entitled to participate to the extent of his claim in the distribution of the trust estate, leaving undetermined all other questions by which the amount he is entitled to receive may be affected. Kennedy v. Thompson, 3 Cir. Ct. R. 446.

Whether one who has made a loan of money for the benefit of a firm, but upon the credit of an individual member, may resort to all for the recovery of the amount loaned, is a question upon which there is much apparent, and some real, conflict among the authorities. The field of necessary inquiry is, however, much narrowed by the fact that in this case the plaintiff ignores the note executed by the member, and sues for the consideration. It may, for the purpose of this case at least, be taken as settled law, that an action upon a promissory note can be maintained against thos$ only who have become parties to it. •

Other authorities cited upon the argument are not helpful here, because the plaintiff had no knowledge when it loaned the money, or when it accepted the renewals, that the member was not the actual borrower. It may be assumed that when ■one loans money to a member of a firm, knowing that it is for the Use of the firm, but elects to take the note of the mem[199]*199ber instead of the firm, his election is conclusive, and he can not thereafter resort to the firm for the repayment of the loan.

The precise question here is, whether one who has loaned m'oney for the direct use of a firm, upon the note of a sole member, and without knowledge that it was for the use of the firm, may, upon discovering the real borrowers, maintain an action for the amount of the loan against the firm. The comprehensive terms used by Collyer and Story, in stating the exemption of the firm from liability in cases where the credit is given to the individual member, do not seem to admit of an affirmative answer to that question. These writers, and the decisions that are in acGord with them, proceed upon the principle that they only are liable to whom credit was given. A leading authority in their support is Emly v. Lye, 15 East, 7. Numerous other authorities, including The National Bank of Salem v. Thomas, 47 N. Y. 15, tend to the conclusion that the firm is exempt in such a case. In Emly v. Lye the declaration contained several counts, some upon the bills drawn by the individual member, and some for money had and received. Lord Ellenborough, the other judges concurring, held that the firm was not liable even on the latter counts, although it appeared that the proceeds of the bills had passed into the partnership account. The reason for this conclusion seems to have been that the case presented nothing “more than the mere discount of bills, and it would be highly dangerous to follow the proceeds into the hands of every party to whose use they may be applied. In the later case of Denton v. Rodie, 3 Camp. 493, which concerned bills drawn by one partner in America upon his firm in Liverpool, according to his custom of drawing such bills, in favor of persons from whom he received thereon money for the use of the firm, the same judge held the firm liable on a count for money lent, although the bills had not been accepted by it, saying, “ I think this case is distinguishable from Emly v. Lye. Here I conceive the partner in America had authority from the two others to raise money for the use of the firm ; and money was accordingly raised from the plaintiffs upon these bills in pursuance of such authority. The transaction is a loan rather than' a [200]*200discount.” Except by those who are able to see that the distinction between a loan and a discount is material to the question under consideration, Denton v. Rodie will be regarded as his lordship’s admission that he had erred in Emly v. Lye.

It is apparently impossible to reconcile the liability of the defendant with the views expressed by the court in The Bank of Salem v. Thomas. The case is not clearly stated in the report, but the decision seems to be justifiable upon the ground that although the two partners who had signed the note sent its proceeds to the firm, they did so in response to a complaint made by the other members, that they had not contributed their share of the capital. • Certainly a firm is not liable for money borrowed by a member, and contributed as his share of the capital.

There is apparent force in the reasoning of these cases, that only those ought to be held liable to whom credit was given — that to remit the creditor to the individual liability of the member fwhom he trusted would be in accordance with his understanding of his rights when the loan was made. Its legal force is, however, much weakened by the consideration that credit is never given to a dormant partner, and it is unquestioned law that a dormant partner may always be charged when discovered. The equitable force of that reasoning is also much impaired by the fact that the individual estate to which it would remit the creditor is less by the amount of the credit than it would have been if the transaction had been as he understood it.

It is said that a judgment for the defendant is required by the authority of Peterson v. Roach, 32 Ohio St. 374. The authority of that case is to be respected in all tribunals inferior to the Supreme Court. It is, however, consistent with the respect due it, that not only the observations of the judge who wrote the opinion, but the proposition laid down by the court in the syllabus as well, be read with reference to the case decided. Courts neither possess nor affect the prescience necéssary to so define all legal propositions as that no exceptions or limitation thereto may be required by cases subsequently arising. In the petition, whose sufficiency was [201]*201there denied, it was not averred that the plaintiff becamel surety for the individual member in ignorance of the fact that the contract was for the firm ; nor was it shown that the firm did not give credit to the partner for the amount of the loan, or that it in any way treated the transaction as creating a liability from it to either the lender or the surety.

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Related

National Bank of Salem v. . Thomas
47 N.Y. 15 (New York Court of Appeals, 1871)

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Bluebook (online)
4 Ohio C.C. 195, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/merchants-national-bank-v-little-ohiocirct-1889.