Myers v. Olds

252 P. 842, 121 Or. 249, 1927 Ore. LEXIS 77
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 14, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 252 P. 842 (Myers v. Olds) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Myers v. Olds, 252 P. 842, 121 Or. 249, 1927 Ore. LEXIS 77 (Or. 1927).

Opinion

BROWN, J.

We will take up the questions in the order in which they are set out above.

In this jurisdiction, a partnership is thus defined:

“A partnership is * * a combination by two or more persons of capital, labor, or skill, for the purpose of business for their common benefit.” Kelley v. Bourne, 15 Or. 476 (16 Pac. 40).

See, also, Willis v. Crawford, 38 Or. 522 (63 Pac. 985, 64 Pac. 866, 53 L. R. A. 904); Hanthorn v. Quinn, 42 Or. 1 (69 Pac. 817).

Story on Partnership, at Section 2, gives us the following much-quote^, definition:

“Partnership, often called co-partnership, is usually defined to be a voluntary contract between two or more competent persons to place their money, effects, labor, and skill, or some or all of them, in lawful commerce or business, with the understanding that there *253 shall he a communion of the profits thereof between them.”

The plaintiff avers that, at the time the loans were made, they were made with the consent of all the defendants, who were held out to the world, and to the plaintiff, as partners, and that the plaintiff made the loans on the faith of the existence of the partnership. The defendants may be charged as partners on either one of two distinct grounds: First, that a partnership actually existed. Second, that they were, with their own knowledge and consent, held forth as partners to the person lending the money, or to the public generally. Parsons on Partnership (3 ed.), page 66, declares that liability to third persons as a partner may happen in either of two cases: First, one may be an actual partner by express agreement. Second, he may permit himself to be held out to the public as a partner, or he may hold himself out as such partner and thereby induce others to act on the faith of such act or representation.

We will briefly review the testimony adduced to sustain the allegations of the complaint as to the co-partnership. The record shows that the plaintiff financed defendant E. D. Olds in the performance of certain road contracts in the State of Washington, defendant thereby becoming indebted to plaintiff in the amount of about $3,500. Thereafter, this defendant secured certain contracts in Oregon, and plaintiff made a series of loans to him for the purpose of financing these contracts. Plaintiff testified that he agreed to advance the money provided defendant E. D. Olds would take his boys into a partnership with him. lie further testified:

*254 “Q. Now, will you. tell the jury what dealings you had with E. D. Olds in the fall of 1919, about the time the other contract expired in relation to other loans? A. Well, he came to me and wanted me to finance him on the new contracts. That was a bridge down here at Try on Creek, and the one in Yamhill County, and, as he was behind with me, I had made up my mind I would not finance him any more because he had lost on the other contracts, and he said: ‘I am going to take the boys in with me as partners.’ * * Well, we just had a gentlemanly agreement that he was to take the boys in with him so I would finance him on the contract. # #
“Q. Did you finance him on the job? A. Yes, sir, clear through to the strict letter, and we had an agreement. ’ ’

Plaintiff testified to the following conversation with Dellon W. Olds relating to the alleged partnership:

“I was going down to Portland one evening, and he came into the car at Oak Grove. He got on there, and I motioned for him to sit down by me, and he sat down by me and we got to talking. He had been in the hospital and I was talking to him about the hospital, and I spoke up to him like this in the conversation, and I said: ‘Well, I am glad your old man took you in as partner. How are you getting along up there?’ and he said: ‘Well, all right.’ * *
“Q. Did you discuss the work any further with him at that time? A. No, I don’t think I discussed the whole issue. I just asked him how he was getting along, and he said he thought his father was getting along all right.”

At the request of his counsel, plaintiff again repeated the conversation with Dellon W. Olds:

“I said: ‘I am glad the old man took you in as a partner,’ and he didn’t say aye, yes, or no to it. He didn’t say he hadn’t taken him in as partner, and he didn’t say he had. But I asked: ‘How are you get *255 ting along on the work?’ and he said: ‘We are getting along very well, I guess.’ ”

The plaintiff testified that, long after - the loans were made, and only a few days before the institution of this action, he requested Orval M. Olds to come to his attorney’s office for the purpose of making a settlement and said to him:

“Now I said: ‘I understood that you were partners in this matter, and if you will come up and the four of you sign a note, we will find out and agree on what you owe me. I can prove it to you in fifteen minutes.’ And he said — well, he said: ‘I won’t.’ I said: ‘Sign a note for four or five thousand dollars if you want to. In other words, you pay the interest on what we agree, at six per cent, and that is now drawing eight, and I will take your note and you keep the taxes paid up on the place and go on out and take out your bonus.’ He said: ‘That would jeopardize us from taking contracts.’ ”

One L. B. Campbell, at that time in the employ of the State Highway Department as a construction engineer, testified that E. D. Olds had told him that “I have taken Orval in and will teach him the bridge game,” and that Orval was in charge when his father wasn’t there. He testified:

“He ran the crew. He ran the job, and took orders from the engineering force, or whatever was allotted to him, as I understand it. ”

J. D. Anderson testified on behalf of the plaintiff that he was personally acquainted with Orval M. Olds; that he had heard him refer to certain jobs that had been performed, and that he had spoken of them as just “We”; or, “When we were at Newberg”; or, “When we were at Oswego.”

J. D. Butler testified that, somewhere from three to six months previous to the institution of this suit, at *256 the request of E. D. Olds he drafted for him arid Orval a partnership agreement, whereby E. D. and Orval M. Olds were to engage in the contracting business. This, however, was long after the loans were made to E. D. Olds. Moreover, each of the three defendants positively denied the existence of a partnership agreement, and the two sons further denied that they had ever held themselves out as such partners, or knowingly permitted themselves to be held out as occupying a partnership relation with their father, though one of them had acted as foreman as testified by Campbell. The plaintiff further proved that defendant E. D. Olds at one time ordered 500 letterheads, on which appeared the following printed matter: “E. D.

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Bluebook (online)
252 P. 842, 121 Or. 249, 1927 Ore. LEXIS 77, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/myers-v-olds-or-1927.