Monroe Grocery Co. v. T. L. & M. Davis

116 So. 546, 165 La. 1027, 1928 La. LEXIS 1820
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 12, 1928
DocketNo. 26817.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 116 So. 546 (Monroe Grocery Co. v. T. L. & M. Davis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Monroe Grocery Co. v. T. L. & M. Davis, 116 So. 546, 165 La. 1027, 1928 La. LEXIS 1820 (La. 1928).

Opinion

OVERTON, J.

This is a suit against the alleged commercial firm of T. L. & M. Davis, and the alleged individual members thereof, Thomas L. Davis, Lila E. Hopkins, and Barbara Hopkins, in solido, for $14,681.92, with 8 per cent, per annum interest on the respective items composing that amount, from various dates, beginning with September 1,1919, and ending with February 1, 1921, subject to credits, consisting of many payments, made on different dates, amounting to $11,645.26, and to hold said Lila E. and Barbara Hopkins liable for certain indebtedness contracted during their mother’s lifetime.

The questions involved in the case are whether Mrs. M. Davis, whose name appears in the title of the alleged firm, was ever legally a member thereof, or could legally be treated, as to third persons, as a member thereof; whether her two daughters, by her first marriage, lila E. and Barbara Hopkins, were members of the firm, or should be so treated as to third persons; whether Lila E. and Barbara Hopkins, by accepting the succession of their mother unconditionally, became liable for her debts; and whether 8 per cent, per annum interest may be collected on the principal of the indebtedness sued upon.

The evidence discloses that B. T. Hopkins conducted, some years ago, a general merchandise business at Marion, in Union parish. Hopkins died, leaving, in addition to certain property, a widow, Maggie Hopkins, and two daughters, Lila E. and Barbara Hopkins. After Hopkins died his widow continued the business, and two years after her husband’s death she married T. L. Davis, one of the defendants herein. After Mrs. Hopkins’ marriage to Davis, which was in 1906,' the business was conducted in the name of T. L. & M. Davis, M. Davis being T. L. Davis’ wife. On June 7, 1920, Mrs. M. Davis died. She left no will, and her two daughters, Lila E. and Barbara Hopkins, who were her only heirs, accepted her succession unconditionally, and had themselves, by order of court, sent into possession of her property, including, as they described it in their petition for possession, an undivided half interest in the mercantile business and stock of goods owned by the firm of T. L. & M. Davis, T. L. Davis owning the other half interest. After the death of Mrs. Davis, her husband continued to conduct thp business in the name of T. L. & M. Davis. During the entire period that the business was conducted in that name, both before and after Mrs. Davis’ death, goods were sold and delivered to it, under that name, and were so charged to it.

The account sued on includes charges for merchandise sold prior to the death of Mrs. Davis, and the account shows that the business was indebted to plaintiff, at that time, in a sum, exclusive of interest, exceeding $2,000. Apparently it is one of the theories of plaintiff that Mrs. Davis was a commercial partner of her husband and liable in solido with him for the indebtedness of the firm, and that when she died her daughters Lila E. and Barbara Hopkins, by accepting her succession unconditionally, became liable for all the. indebtedness of the firm; existing on the date of her death. This theory, however, is without foundation, for it is clear that Mrs. Davis, being the wife of T. L. Davis, could not enter into a partnership with her husband, and could not bind herself as his partner even by her conduct.

*1031 Another of plaintiff’s positions is that the store belonged to the community of acquets and gains that existed between Mrs. Davis and her husband, and that as Mrs. Davis’ daughters accepted her succession unconditionally, they became bound for her half of the balance of the indebtedness that was due on the account sued on at the time of her death.

During the 14 years that intervened between the second marriage of Mrs. Davis and her death in 1920, the business may be said to have been converted into community property, and hence that Mrs. Davis’ daughters, by the unconditional acceptance of her succession, became liable for her half of the indebtedness due on the account sued on at the time of her death. However, an examination of that account shows that sufficient has been paid on it, since the death of Mrs. Davis, to satisfy all the indebtedness shown on it, contracted during the lifetime of Mrs. Davis, including the interest, up to her death, which plaintiff has capitalized, and to leave over $1,000 to be applied on the indebtedness contracted since her death. Therefore none of the indebtedness, shown by the account, contracted during the lifetime of Mrs. Davis exists. It has been paid.

The foregoing positions were taken by plaintiff in an effort to show that the daughters of Mrs. Davis are liable for the whole or a part of the indebtedness, which might be found due plaintiff at the time of the death of their mother. However, plaintiff’s main position does not concern itself with that part of the indebtedness,, which, as we have said, no longer exists, but with the indebtedness contracted after Mrs. Davis’ death in the name of T. L. & M. Davis, which was the name in which the business was conducted prior to Mrs. Davis’ death. The contention of plaintiff is that, after the death of Mrs. Davis, and after her daughters had accepted her succession, including a half interest in the mercantile business, conducted in the name of T. L. & M. Davis, they became the partners of T. L. Davis, under the old firm name of T. L. & M. Davis, or at all events permitted themselves to be held out to the world as such, and hence are liable in solido with T. L. Davis for the indebtedness of the new firm.

There was no agreement between the daughters of Mrs. Davis and T. L. Davis, creating a partnership. But plaintiff points to the fact that the daughters of Mrs. .Davis did not demand a partition of the stock of merchandise and assets of the business, but permitted the business to be operated as it had been before the death of Mrs. Davis. From this premise plaintiff argues that the daughters bound themselves either tacitly or expressly to hold and operate the business in common with their stepfather, T. L. Davis, who, they acknowledged, owned an undivided half interest in it, and that as a result they are liable as partners.

We think the record fails to disclose that there was any tacit or express agreement to hold the store in commop and to operate it for the benefit of the three interested in it. What really occurred, we think, was that T. L. Davis, after his wife’s death, took over the interests of his stepdaughters,' who were living in the same house in which he lived, and, ran the business as his own, in the name of T. L. & M. Davis, and thereby became indebted to them for the value of their half interest in it.

Nor do we think that there is sufficient evidence to hold Mrs. Davis’ daughters liable as partners from any other standpoint. They took no part in the conduct of the business. While the needs of the home, which, was their home and their stepfather’s, were supplied, so far as possible, out of the store, yet the merchandise taken out of it for that purpose was supplied by Davis. The two daughters did nothing, so far as the record discloses, *1033 sufficient to lead the outside world or plaintiff to believe that they were members of such a firm as T. L. & M. Davis. Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
116 So. 546, 165 La. 1027, 1928 La. LEXIS 1820, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/monroe-grocery-co-v-t-l-m-davis-la-1928.