Mock v. Stoddard

177 F. 611, 101 C.C.A. 237, 1910 U.S. App. LEXIS 4402
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedMarch 21, 1910
DocketNo. 1,725
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 177 F. 611 (Mock v. Stoddard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mock v. Stoddard, 177 F. 611, 101 C.C.A. 237, 1910 U.S. App. LEXIS 4402 (9th Cir. 1910).

Opinion

MORROW, Circuit Judge.

The Stoddard Bros. Dumber Company, a partnership composed of A. K. Stoddard and Charles Mos-lander, doing business in Nampa, Idaho, was adjudicated a bankrupt on August 19, 1908, in the District Court of the United States for the District of Idaho, on the petition of certain creditors. The petition did not ask that the individual members of the firm should be adjudicated bankrupts, and no such adjudication was had. The partnership was originally organized April 1, 1896, by two brothers, George Stoddard and A. K. Stoddard, under the firm name of the Stoddard Bros. Dumber Company. On March 1, 1897, George Stoddard withdrew from the firm, selling his interest to A. K. Stoddard for the sum of $5,000, for which he received the notes of A. K. Stoddard. About this time Charles Moslander became a member of the firm. Thereafter A. K. Stoddard and Charles Moslander continued to be partners under the firm name of the Stoddard Bros. Dumber Company. George Stoddard,, with two other brothers, constituted the firm of Stoddard Bros., of Baker City, Or. Between these two firms there appear to have been a number of business transactions, conducted by George Stoddard. The latter also became an individual indorser upon notes for the benefit of the Idaho firm, which George Stoddard was finally required to pay.

When the Idaho firm was adjudicated a bankrupt, George Stoddard presented claims against the firm amounting to $51,026.93 for the firm debts paid by him, including the renewed notes for the half interest sold to A. K. Stoddard. On presenting these claims to the- referee in bankruptcy for allowance, they were objected to by the creditors and all disallowed; the referee holding with respect to the claim founded upon the renewed notes given for George Stoddard’s interest in the firm that it was an individual debt of A. K. Stoddard, and not a partnership debt, and that as to two notes, of $6,000 each, given to George Stoddard and signed by the individual members of the firm, namely, A. K. Stoddard and Charles Moslander, the referee held ’that they were also individual debts of the partners. The referee held, further, with respect to the other claims wherein George Stoddard had paid debts of the firm, that George Stoddard was either a member of the bankrupt firm or had conducted himself in such manner in’reference to the general public as to induce others to believe that he was a partner, and that such claims should therefore be postponed until all the firm creditors had been paid. Upon petition the questions were certified to the District Judge for review. The District Judge affirmed’ the opinion of the referee in disallowing the claims based upon the renewed notes given by A. K. Stoddard for the interest of George Stoddard in the firm, but sustained the provable character of other claims against the bankrupt estate, amounting to $46,651.93, less a liability of $375 found against George Stoddard on account of the release [613]*613of a second mortgage, wherein it was held that the creditors had lost that amount, leaving a balance of $46,SIS.93, which the referee was directed to recognize as a valid claim against the bankrupt estate. In re Stoddard Bros. Lumber Co. (D. C.) 169 Fed. 190. From this judgment of the District Court the appellant prosecutes the present appeal.

The first objection to be considered is the objection made to the evidence introduced for the purpose of showing that two notes, for $6,000 each, dated April 5, 1904, and signed by Alexander K. Stoddard and Charles Moslander individually, were for and on behalf of ihc partnership. The objection to this evidence was sustained by the referee, but in accordance with equity procedure the evidence was taken and certified to the court by the referee as part of the recoi 1 of the proceedings. The evidence is the testimony of George Stoddard as follows:

“Q. What were those notes given for, Mr. Stoddard? (Objection. * * Sustained.) A. For lumber furnished the ¡business. Q. The business of whom? A. Stoddard Bros. Lumber Company. Q. You may state who furnished the lumber. A. It was furnished by Stoddard Bros., of Baker City. Q. State who was the owner of that claim of Stoddard Bros. A. Why, Stoddard Bros. It was assigned to me. Q. Where did the lumber go that you shipped? A. It went to Nampa, Idaho. Q. Who used the lumber? Who had the lumber? A. Why, it was shipped to the Stoddard Bros. Lumber Company. Q. State whether or not it has ever been paid for? A. No, sir; it has not. Q. You may state, if you know, why those notes were signed individually, instead of Stoddard Bros. Lumber Company. A. Why, I don’t know; the two parties were there, and they just signed them in that way. I thought there was no difference, knowing that they were the two that constituted the business. I thought the individual signature was really better than the company’s signature.”

It is contended that these notes were individual notes, and not paittnership obligations, and were not provable pro rata with claims of partnership obligations; that in the execution of these notes in the form of individual obligations there was no mistake, accident, duress, or fraud; and that the notes were signed individually because the obligee “thought the individual signatures were really better than the company’s signature.” The preliminary objection that parol evidence was inadmissible to show that these notes were given for and on behalf of the partnership, on the ground that such evidence tended to contradict and vary the terms of written contracts, is not tenable. The evidence was not introduced for that purpose. There is no controversy as to the terms of the written contracts. The question is: Whose contracts were they? Here are two individuals whose names are signed to these notes. They were partners in business, and had been for many years. The holder of the notes introduced testimony tending to show that they were partnership notes, given for partnership obligations. This evidence was admissible under the well-known rule that evidence is always admissible to show that the signature to a written instrument, although that of an individual and prima facie for the purpose of acknowledging an individual liability, is in fact that of an agent for an undisclosed principal.

In Salmon Falls Manufacturing Co. v. Goddard, 14 How. 446, 454, 14 L. Ed. 493, the Supreme Court said:

[614]*614“Extraneous evidence Is also admissible to show that a person whosemame is affixed to tbe contract acted only as an agent, thereby enabling the principal either to sue or b.e sued in his own name; and this, though it purported on its fac.e to have been made by the agent himself, and'the principal not named. Higgins v. Senior, 8 Mees. & W. 834; Trueman v. Loder, 11 Ad. & Ell. 589. Eord Denman observed, in the latter case, ‘that parol evidence is always necessary to show that the party sued is the party making the contract', and bound by it. Whether he does so in his own name, or in that of another, or in a feigned name, and whether the contract be signed by his own hand (or that of an agent), are inquiries not different in their nature from the question. Who is the person who has just ordered goods in a shop? If he is sued for the price, and his identity made out, the contract is not varied by appearing to have been made by him in a name not his own.’ ”

Whether the evidence was sufficient to establish the liability of the partnership is another question.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
177 F. 611, 101 C.C.A. 237, 1910 U.S. App. LEXIS 4402, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mock-v-stoddard-ca9-1910.