Michelin Tire Co. v. Akers

255 P. 388, 32 N.M. 234
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 21, 1927
DocketNo. 2951.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 255 P. 388 (Michelin Tire Co. v. Akers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Michelin Tire Co. v. Akers, 255 P. 388, 32 N.M. 234 (N.M. 1927).

Opinion

OPINION OE THE COURT

WATSON, J.

T. G. Akers and W. K. Jones were sued upon an indebtedness incurred while they were doing business as copartners. The partnership had been dissolved, and Akers had assumed its liabilities. The judgment was against Akers, but in favor of Jones; the court’s conclusion of law being “that the plaintiff at least impliedly released W. K. Jones, and is estopped to hold the defendant, W. K. Jones, for such indebtedness, and cannot now recover from him.” The plaintiff, Michelin Tire Company, appeals.

The bill of exceptions having been stricken (Michelin Tire Co. v. Akers, 30 N. M. 338, 233 P. 1005), the only question for our consideration is whether the court’s findings support the above-quoted conclusion and the judgment based thereon.

It appears from the findings that Akers and Jones, copartners doing business under the name of Yeso Trading Company, became indebted to appellant in the sum of $552.23. A few months later the partnership dissolved; Akers purchasing appellee’s interest, and assuming and agreeing to pay appellant’s account. Appellee promptly “notified the plaintiff (appellant) of the terms and conditions of said sale, and notified the plaintiff that he would be no longer responsible for any part of the indebtedness owed by the Yeso Trading Company, and particularly would not be responsible for the indebtedness sued upon by the plaintiff in this action.” About a month later Akers paid one-half of the indebtedness and about four months later gave his check for the balance. This check, however, was dishonored, and the balance has never been paid.

The third and fourth findings are as follows:

“(3) The court further finds that upon the receipt of said notice the plaintiff did not notify the defendant, W. K. Jones, that he would not be -released from said obligation; that while the testimony introduced on behalf of the plaintiff is to the effect that plaintiff’s agent wrote the defendant W. K. Jones that he would not be released from said indebtedness, yet the evidence does not show that the letter was mailed to the defendant at Yeso, N. M., and said defendant positively testifies that no such notice was received by him. Therefore the court finds that he did not receive such notice, and that he had no notice that his proposition to the plaintiff was not accepted. Although the evidence positively discloses that plaintiff had agents in the town of Yeso at different times subsequent to the dissolution of said partnership and prior to the filing of the suit herein, and althoug-h several months elapsed between said time, said agents or the plaintiff never notified the defendant W. K. Jones that he was being-held under said partnership contract, and the first notice he had of the plaintiff’s claim against him and that they did not assent to his proposition was the filing of the suit herein.
'‘(4) The court further finds that, after the receipt of the notice from the defendant W. K. Jones that he was no longer a member of said partnership, plaintiff dealt with the defendant T. G-. Akers as though said obligation were the obligation of the defendant T. G. Akers alone, and accepted a check from him, under date of September 10, 1922, for the balance due on said account, but which check the court finds was not honored or paid by the defendant T. G. Akers.”

By tlie fifth, sixth and seventh findings it appears that, when appellant received notice of the dissolution, Akers had sufficient property, so that if appellant had moved promptly for the collection of its debt, the same could have been collected; but that, before it commenced suit, Akers had disposed of his property, and had not sufficient property in De Baca county to pay the indebtedness, nor to indemnify appellee in case he .should pay it; and that, if now compelled to pay, appellee would suffer loss “occasioned solely by the conduct of the plaintiff in not notifying him that his proposition was not accepted, and in permitting- the defendant T. G. Akers to dispose of the partnership property and of his individual property without collecting said indebtedness; that the plaintiff should not be allowed at this time to hold the said W.-K. Jones for such indebtedness, in view of its own fault and wrong in the premises.”

Upon such findings the conclusion of law set forth at the outset is based.

Appellee’s counsel states his position thus:

"The contention of counsel for appellee is not that the defendant W. K. Jones would be released from liability on an indebtedness which was due and payable when he retired merely because the creditor did not at once sue and collect the same. There is another element in this case, which brings it within the rule followed by the lower court. The goods consigned to the partnership, for payment of which the suit below was filed, were still on hand and unsold when defendant W. K. Jones retired and notified plaintiff of his arrangement with his partner T. 6. Akers, and that he ' would no longer be responsible for the payment of said consignment of goods. In view of this fact, it is the contention of counsel, and was the theory of the lower court, that, if plaintiff wished to permit the remaining partner to keep the consignment and sell off the goods, thus benefiting- plaintiff as well as the remaining partner, then it was bound to look to the remaining partner solely for payment.”

This is, indeed, a harsh doctrine. The creditor having sold and delivered his goods, on being notified of dissolution of the partnership, and that the indebtedness had been assumed by the continuing partner, must either demand return of the goods or lose the liability of the withdrawing partner. Either alternative means loss to the creditor. It means, in effect, that the indebted partnership, by dissolving, may cancel the contract of sale and force the seller to accept a return of the goods. Certainly debtors cannot, in such manner, repudiate their contracts.

Mission Fixture Co. v. Potter, 26 Cal. App. 601, 148 P. 223, is relied upon by appellee to support his theory. We do not consider it in point. That case did not involve the relation of debtor and creditor. Goods had been consigned to the partnership to be used as samples from which orders might be taken. A bailment resulted. The contract provided for return of the goods on the bailor’s demand. The bailee partnership was dissolved; one partner purchasing the other’s interest and continuing the business under the same name. Notice of these facts was given to the bailor. The principle of the decision is merely that the 'bailor, by permitting the bailment to continue when he might have ended it at any time, estopped himself from claiming any liability as against the retiring partner for conversion of the goods, after the dissolution, by the continuing partner. This ease clearly does not support appellee’s theory, nor is there any authority cited to support the proposition that, by virtue of the notice given, appellee was released from all liability. We cannot sustain the judgment on this theory.

It is urged further, in support of the judgment, that the notice was effective at least to change the appellee’s status from that of joint debtor to one of surety; and that, by its conduct, appellant released, or estopped itself from relying on, appelee’s liability as surety.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
255 P. 388, 32 N.M. 234, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michelin-tire-co-v-akers-nm-1927.