Murphey v. Bush

50 S.E. 1004, 122 Ga. 715, 1905 Ga. LEXIS 306
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMay 13, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 50 S.E. 1004 (Murphey v. Bush) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Murphey v. Bush, 50 S.E. 1004, 122 Ga. 715, 1905 Ga. LEXIS 306 (Ga. 1905).

Opinion

Evans, J.

The firm of W. R. Murphey & Company was composed of W. R. Murphey, J. T. Murphey, and others. This firm was largely indebted to Ambrose Murphey, and in 1885 the members of the firm sold out its business to him in part payment of its indebtedness to him. A partnership agreement was entered into on August 31, 1885, between J. T. Murphey and Ambrose Murphey, by the terms of which the latter was to furnish the capital, to consist of the depleted stock of goods of W. R. Murphey & Company, valued at $4,730, and other goods to supplement the stock, not to exceed $2,500, in value. The stock of merchandise, as thus supplemented, was to be the separate property of Ambrose Murphey. The storehouse was also to be furnished by him. J. T. Murphey was to personally superintend the business, keep the books, buy all goods, and hire and pay such assistants as might be necessary to carry on the business. No firm debts were to be ■contracted beyond the supplemental purchase of $2,500 of goods, ■except by the express agreement of both partners; nor were any [717]*717goods to be sold on credit, except upon the express understanding of both parties. The incidental expenses of the business, such as coal, lights, stationery, etc., were to be paid out of the business. Neither partner was to draw out of the business, whether in goods or money, more than $100 per month, unless by consent of the other partner. The profits of the business were to be equally divided between the partners, and were to be ascertained as follows : “ Stock shall first be taken, including money, notes, and accounts; then enough goods shall be set aside for Ambrose Murphey equal in value at cost to amount to capital stock put into business by him; and if not enough goods to replace the capital stock, then more shall be replaced with solvent notes and accounts ; and if not enough notes and accounts, then by any other property of business; then the balance, whether in goods, notes and accounts, or money, or other property, to be divided equally between parties.” Beginning in September, 1885, and extending over a period until February 7, 1887, W. H. H. Bush bought goods from the firm of J. T. Murphey & Company to the amount of $1,198.33. The various purchases were charged on the books • of the firm to Bush. The firm of J. T. Murphey & Company was dissolved by mutual agreement of the partners on February 9, 1887, and by the terms of the dissolution Ambrose Murphey was to take the stock of merchandise and notes and accounts, settle all claims against the firm, and if any balance remained it was to be equally divided between J. T. and Ambrose Murphey, after deducting the amount of the capital invested by the latter. On February 6, 1888, J. T. Murphey & Company, for the use of Ambrose Murphey, brought suit in the superior court of Monroe county against W. H. H. Bush for the principal sum of $1,198.33, alleged to be due for goods purchased of J. T. Murphey & Company and set out in. an attached bill of particulars. The defendant filed a plea of the general issue, and subsequently amended his plea by averring, in substance, among other things, that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover, because of an agreement with J. T. Murphey, made at the time the goods were purchased, that the defendant was to purchase the goods and the amount of the purchases was to be in settlement of a debt which the firm of W. R. Murphey & Company was due him, which debt was in excess of the value of the articles purchased, and that in a fair accounting [718]*718between Ambrose and J. T. Murphey, Ambrose Murphey had received from the assets of the firm of J. T. Murphey & Company sufficient funds to discharge all the firm debts and leave a balance due J. T. Murphey, sufficient to pay the account sued on; wherefore defendant prayed an accounting between J. T. and Ambrose' Murphey, and if from such accounting it appeared that Ambrose Murphey was indebted to J. T. Murphey, that .the amount of the indebtedness be applied to the payment of the account sued on. The case was referred to an auditor, but before a hearing before him was had, Bush died and his administrators were made parties defendant in his stead. The auditor reported that the plaintiff was entitled to recover $594.59 principal, besides interest. Both the plaintiff and the defendants filed exceptions of law and of fact to the auditor’s report. ’ While the judge of the superior court had these exceptions under considerationj Ambrose Murphey died, and the suit afterwards proceeded in the name of J. T. Murphey, as surviving partner, for the use of the administrators of the estate of Ambrose Murphey. The court overruled the exceptions of law, disapproved the exceptions of fact, and made the report of the auditor the judgment of. the court. Plaintiff and the defendants sued out bills of exceptions complaining of the judgment. The questions presented by the two bills of exceptions are so intimately related that they may with propriety be considered together.

1. It appeared on the hearing before the auditor that when the firm of J. T. Murphey & Company was dissolved, Ambrose Murphey was sick, and his son, T. E. Murphey, represented him as agent in taking charge of the assets of the firm of J. T. Murphey & Company and perfecting the agreement of dissolution between the partners. When T. E. Murphey was offered as a witness in behalf of the plaintiff, counsel for the defendants insisted that he was an incompetent witness, having acted as a,gent for Ambrose Murphey, for whose use the action was brought, and Bush, the original defendant, having died and then being represented by his administrators. The auditor held that these facts did not preclude the witness from testifying in the case, and exception to this ruling was taken. Under the evidence act of 1889 (Civil Code, § 5269), the witness was competent to testify as to any matters relevant to the case, save only as to any transactions or [719]*719communications he may have had, while acting as agent, with the deceased Bush. Accordingly, this general objection to the competency of the witness was not well taken. If, during his examination, he was called on to testify as to any matter to which his partial disqualification as a witness applied, proper objection should have been raised; and if the auditor overruled the objection, an exception to the ruling, setting forth the testimony admitted over objection, should have been filed. Rusk v. Hill, 117 Ga. 723 (5), 730, and cit.; Trentham v. Bluthenthal, 118 Ga. 530 (2). There is no attempt in the present case to point out any testimony of this witness which was open to objection. This being so, it is not the province of this court to search the record with a view to discovering whether the examination of the witness was confined to matters as to which he was competent to testify. Hudson v. Hudson, 119 Ga. 638; Butler v. Railway, Id. 959.

Auother exception of law filed to the auditor’s report was that he “ erred in not passing upon the objection of the defendants to the testimony of Ambrose Murphey, which was that he was an incompetent witness for the reason that Bush, the opposite party, was dead.” What has just been said in regard to the competency of T. E. Murphey as a witness and the ruling of the auditor in regard thereto disposes also of this exception.

The plaintiff excepted to the ruling of the auditor that T. E. Murphey “ was incompetent, on account of the death of W. H. H.

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Bluebook (online)
50 S.E. 1004, 122 Ga. 715, 1905 Ga. LEXIS 306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murphey-v-bush-ga-1905.