Miller v. Laughlin

147 S.W. 711, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 511
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 18, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 147 S.W. 711 (Miller v. Laughlin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. Laughlin, 147 S.W. 711, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 511 (Tex. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

*712 PETICOLAS, C. J.

This was a suit by one R. O. Laughlin on four promissory notes executed to the order of his wife against D. R. Wall & Co., alleged to be a copartnership composed of D. R. Wall and P. J. Miller. The appellant answered by general denial and alleged that the money was loaned to D. R. Wall upon his personal faith and credit, and was used by him for his personal benefit, and not for the use and benefit of the grocery business of I>. R. Wall & Co., and denied under oath that Miller was a partner.' The case was tried on special issues and resulted in a judgment for plaintiff against Wall and Miller individually and against D. R. Wall & Co. for principal and interest, but not for attorney’s fees.

[1, 2] The first question raised by the assignments is whether or not a partnership can be proved, or one can be proved to be a member of a partnership by circumstantial evidence.

As illustrating the specific manner in which the question arose in this case, we make the following concise statement of some of the evidence: One Bridgman testified that “in 1907 and 1908, during the absence of D. R. Wall, one of the clerks in the store came to me in the presence of P. J. Miller, stated that he was out of a certain line of goods; Miller asked me why I did not have the goods, and if the jobbers had cut me off from credit; he stated that if they had he would see that I got the goods, got any goods that I nee'ded. At another time he asked me to push a couple of accounts against certain parties. Miller and Wall both instructed me to buy any goods that were needed by the firm. I quit the employment because my salary was cut. Miller and Wall were in the back of the store talking, and Wall came to me and told me my salary would have to be cut. Miller owned a two-thirds interest in the business.” Rankin testified: “I had a conversation with Miller. It was the day Wall closed up. Miller told me that there had been a dissolution of the partnership between him and Wall and that he could not pay the bill that D. R. Wall & Co. owed me, which I had gone around to collect. He s'aid he had nothing to do with it, that he was no longer a partner with Wall, that I ought to know it; that he had had it published in the daily papers and that ought to have put me on my guard.” A dissolution notice published in the “Abilene Reporter” of date January 24, 1909, was put in evidence; it was signed by D. R. Wall & Co. Judgments were offered in evidence in suits against D. R. Wall & Co. in which Miller was alleged to be a partner and was served. The fact that the judgments were permitted to go by default was shown. J. T. Bridgman testified: “I had a conversation with Miller in which he was talking about his son. He said he wanted his son to take a business education so that he could give

him his interest in the store with Wall & Co.” L. D. Kennedy testified that, seeking to collect an account of Miller against D. R. Wall & Co., Miller told him that he had not had anything to do with D. R. Wall & Co. since the 1st of January. Harris testified: “I was employed by Wall & Co. and left their employ in April, 1908. Wall told me expenses had to be cut down; that I could quit on the 20th. Before the 20th of the month I asked Miller why I was to be discharged, and Miller replied that it was immaterial with him which one of the clerks quit, but the expenses were too great, one of the clerks had to quit. He said he wanted to put his son, Jay, in the store so he could learn the business.” At another time Miller looked at a team used in the business, stated that one of the mules needed rest; that he would send in a sorrel mule from the farm to take the place of the mule that needed rest. The plaintiff testified: “I had a conversation with Wall subsequent to the time this matter matured. Miller was present. Wall told me that he had sold out to Miller; that the money would come from Miller; that Miller was going to pay it. Miller did not deny the statements made by Wall in his presence.” Wall testified that the money borrowed went into and was used by the business of D. R. Wall & Co.

The theory of the defendants was that Miller had never been a partner, that he had simply loaned Wall money, and both so testified. The court submitted as a special issue whether or not Miller was a partner, and we are clearly of the opinion that the evidence indicated, although in its nature circumstantial, was sufficient to support the issue, and, the jury having answered that Miller was a partner, we cannot revise their finding. We know of no fact, relation, or condition known to th'e law that cannot be proved by circumstantial evidence as well as by direct. If it is within the law to convict one of crime through circumstantial evidence, surely it is within the law to prove one a partner by circumstantial evidence. Indeed, if circumstantial evidence could not be resorted to, persons dealing with the firm could only hold the one or the other member according to whether the partnership was denied or not. Newberger v. Heintze, 3 Tex. Civ. App. 259, 22 S. W. 867; Brannin v. Company, 30 S. W. 572; Davis v. Bingham, 46 S. W. 840.

[3, 4] Appellant’s third assignment of error complains of the form in which the court submitted the special issue. The issue was submitted in this language: “Was Miller a partner, a member of the firm of Wall & Co., at the time the notes sued on in this case were executed, or at any time prior thereto ?” —the part objected to being the words “or at any time prior thereto.”

There are two or three matters to consider in determining whether the form of this *713 question was erroneous or not: (a) No special charge correcting the form of this question was presented to the court by appellant, so far as the record shows, (b) It is a general rule of law that a partnership once proved to exist continues, so far as liability against the respective partners is concerned, until not only dissolution is shown, but notice of the dissolution is brought home to the party seeking to charge the respective members. Devine v. Martin, 15 Tex. 25. (e) These notes were alleged to have been executed in December, 1908, and the circumstances tending to prove partnership took place at many times prior and subsequent to the execution of the notes; the plaintiffs allegation being that the partnership existed from January, 1908.

It is apparent that, in so far as the question might be construed to refer to a time prior to January, 1908, it would be erroneous. It is equally apparent, we think, that, in so far as it referred to any time from January 1, 1908, up to the date of the execution of the notes, it was not erroneous. As all of the testimony tends, in effect, to show the existence of a partnership at the time of the execution of the notes, although the date of some of the circumstances relied on to show it was prior thereto, the jury could not have been misled thereby; therefore, in so far as there is an ingredient of error in the form of the question, it is clearly harmless, and this is especially true in view of the fact that appellant did not present a special charge clearing the matter up. Therefore the assignment of error is overruled. ’

[5] The seventh assignment of error is addressed to a statement made by Laughlin that she (his wife) was thoroughly convinced that they were partners.

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Bluebook (online)
147 S.W. 711, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 511, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-laughlin-texapp-1912.