Mulkey v. Anglin

1933 OK 494, 25 P.2d 778, 166 Okla. 8, 89 A.L.R. 980, 1933 Okla. LEXIS 324
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 26, 1933
Docket21890
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 1933 OK 494 (Mulkey v. Anglin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mulkey v. Anglin, 1933 OK 494, 25 P.2d 778, 166 Okla. 8, 89 A.L.R. 980, 1933 Okla. LEXIS 324 (Okla. 1933).

Opinion

WELCH. J.

In the trial court W. T. Anglin, Alfred Stevenson, and Forrest M. Darrough, a partnership doing business as the Holdenville Finance Company, as plaintiffs, sued the defendants, Jas. H. Mulkey and R. D. Howell, as partners, doing business as the Mulkey Motor Company, for the balance due on each of 38 promissory notes which were originally executed and made payable to “Mulkey Motor Company ” and were sold to plaintiffs, and in each instance conveyed by general indorsement, “Mulkey Motor Company by Jas. H. Mulkey, Member of the Firm.” The notes were sold and indorsed to plaintiffs at varous dates between June, 1927, and January, 1928.

The defendants contend that the Mulkey Motor Company was not a partnership at that time, while admitting that the Mulkey Motor Company was a partnership composed of said two partners for several months or a year prior to June, 1927. They contend that on dune G, 1927, the Mulkey Motor Company was incorporated, with Jas. H. Mulkey, R. D. Howell, and Mrs. R. D. Howell as stockholders, and that at all of the times of assignment and indorsement involved in this action, the Mulkey Motor Company was a corporation and engaged in business as such, and that the derendants are therefore not personally liable.

The plaintiffs contend, in substance, that, although the defendants did file articles of incorporation and receive a charter on June G, 1927, the defendants did not proceed further with such incorporation for more than a year, and did not at any time proceed to operate or conduct their business as a corporation, but, on the contrary, continued to conduct their business in the exact and identical manner as before, and held themselves out to the public and to the plaintiffs as continuing to be partners; that defendants took no steps whatever to dissolve their partnership, and that they permitted the plaintiffs to believe and rely upon the fact that the partnership continued to exist.

There was no controversy as to the amount due on the notes sued upon, and at the conclusion of the trial before the court, without a jury, there was a general finding and judgment for the plaintiffs for the amount sued for, the trial court thus finding that the defendants were liable individually as partners.

It is a controverted question of fact as to what, if anything, was done by the Mul-key Motor Company by way of acting as a corporation after June 6, 1927; it is not certain when or whether any stock was issued. After that date they continued to indorse and sell notes which were handled and sold and indorsed in exactly the same manner as before June 6th. The business of the Mulkey Motor Company, so far as is material here, was the selling of automobiles and taking notes for deferred installment payments, and negotiating and selling those notes, such as the notes involved in this action. After it is claimed by the defendants that the incorporation became effective so as to relieve them of personal liability as partners, the business continued to be the same, and was operated at the same place under the same name and with the same manag’ement. It was shown by statements of both defendants made at various times between June 6, 1927, and the trial of this cause in the trial court, that' each had made statements to the effect, in substance, that they never did transact, busi *10 ness as a corporation, and that they, in fact, did continue to operate and conduct their business as a partnership. It was shown that credit statements had been signed by both of the defendants after June 6th, in which they referred to themselves as partners, and to the Mulkey Motor Company as a partnership, and in 19-28, the defendant Howell sold his interest in the business to Dr. Cone, and in the conveyance referring to the business as a partnership, and in fact selling- and conveying his interest in the partnership to Cone, whereupon Dr. Cone and Jas. H. Mulkey, by agreement, continued the partnership, or created a new partnership composed of themselves.

As to most of these facts, there was conflict of evidence, but the evidence is sufii-cient to sustain the finding of fact that after June 6, 1927, the defendants continued to conduct and operate their business as a partnership, and to hold themselves out as partners, and to such an extent as to permit the plaintiffs to believe and rely upon the fact of the continuance of the partnership.

In fact, there was noi effort made by the defendants whatever to legally dissolve their partnership. They were admittedly partners prior to June, 1927, and prior thereto had dealt with the plaintiffs in the same manner as they did deal with them after said date, and if it was the intention of the defendants to incorporate their business, and to dissolve theiir partnership in June, 1927, they made no- effort whatever to dissolve, their partnership in the manner provided by law. Section 8134, C. O. S. 1921 [11655, O. S. 1981], reads as follows:

“The liability of a general partner for the acts of his copartners continues, even after the dissolution of the partnership, in favor of persons who- have had dealings with, and given credit to the partnership during its existence, until they have had, personal notice of the dissolution;, and in favor of other persons, until such dissolution has been advertised in a newspaper published in every county where the partnership, at the time of its dissolution, had a place of business; to the extent, in either case, to- which such persons part with value, in good faith, and in the belief that such, partner is still a member of the firm.”

The defendants seem to- contend that the mere fact that they filed articles of incorporation, and that a corporate charter was issued, would of itself operate to dissolve the partnership and create a record dissolution thereof, which would be binding upon all parties without any further notice and without regard to the manner in which the partners might thereafter conduct themselves and operate the business, but we are unable to follow.counsel to such conclusion.

In Rowley on Modern Law of Partnerships, section 253, it is said:

“The question has arisen as to the liability of stockholders where a creditor dealt with a corporation believing that he was dealing with a partnership. It may be safely assumed that if the creditor has never before dealt with a corporation as a partnership, and if he has not been led to believe, from statements or conduct of the stockholders, that it was in fact a partnership, it would seem clear that he could not hold the stockholders personally liable merely because of an erroneous or unfounded belief. But if a creditor had aforetimes dealt with the association as a partnership, and if the partnership had become incorporated without notice to him of the change, and it had continued his running account without break, then the creditors could hold the incorpor-ators, the original partners, liable on contract made after the incorporation. In such cases the corporation would be estopped to set up its organization as a defense against such a creditor. Where the person in charge of the business represented to the creditor that the association was a partnership and not a corporation and where the creditor had no knowledge of any incorporation but dealt with the association as a partnership, this was held sufficient to make the stockholders liable as partners.”

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Bluebook (online)
1933 OK 494, 25 P.2d 778, 166 Okla. 8, 89 A.L.R. 980, 1933 Okla. LEXIS 324, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mulkey-v-anglin-okla-1933.