N. Rogers & Sons v. Batchelor

37 U.S. 221, 9 L. Ed. 1063, 12 Pet. 221, 1838 U.S. LEXIS 355
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 10, 1838
StatusPublished
Cited by72 cases

This text of 37 U.S. 221 (N. Rogers & Sons v. Batchelor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
N. Rogers & Sons v. Batchelor, 37 U.S. 221, 9 L. Ed. 1063, 12 Pet. 221, 1838 U.S. LEXIS 355 (1838).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Story

delivered the opinion of the Court.

. This, cause comes before us on a writ of error to the, district court of •the district of Mississippi. The original action wasrdebt; - brought-by the plaintiffs in error, (Rogers & Sons,) against Abel H. Bhckholts, upon, the following writing obligatory, — “ -Natchez, Mississippi,* $3288 03. On the first day of April next) we promise to pay.N. Rogers & Sons, or order, three thousand two hundred and eighty-eight dollars three cents, value received, with interest from daté. Witness our hands and'séals, this .first day 'of January, 1824: Jno. Richards, [seal.] A. ]H. Buckhblts., [seal.]” Upon such an instrument, by the laws of Mississippi, one of the parties may be sued alone; and accordingly, Richards was no party to the suit. Upon -the plea of payment, issue was joined; and, pending the proceedings, Buckholts died, and his administrators were made parties; and upon the trial, .a-verdict was found for the defendants, for the sum bf eighteen Hundred and twenty-six- dollars and seventy-four cents, being the balance-due to them upon certain set-offü set up at the trial. A bill of'exceptions was taken at the trial by the plaintiffs; and judgment having passed for the defendaftts, the. present-writ oferror has been brought-to revise that judgment.

*228 By the bill of exceptions, it appears, that the defendants set up as a set-off, an account headed “ Dr. Messrs. N. Rogers & Sons in account current to first of April, 1830, with John Richards & Co. Cr.,” on the debit side of which account were the two following items, which constituted the grounds'of the objections which have been made at the argument; — -“To cash, $1450 46.”- “To-our acceptance of your draft, payable at six months, $3000.” To support their case, the' defendants offered the testimony of one Rowan; who testified to a conversation had in his presence, in the year 1830, between Buckholts and one of the plaintiffs, relative to their accounts; that the accounts then before them were accounts made out by Rogers & Sons, between themselves and Richards & Buckholts, and John .Richards & Co., and John Richards & Lambert & Brothers ixi account with John Richards &,Co. Richards & Buckholts, mud John Richards; and an account made out by Buckholts between Richards ,& Buckholts,. and Rogers & Sons. In the conversation relative to these accounts, Buckholts asked Rogers if- the several items charged ■in his account had not been received; and Rogers admitted they had been. Among other items so admitted, were the above items of fourteen hundred and fifty dollars forty-six cents, and three thousand dollars. In-the conversation about the item of fourteen hundred and fifty ¡dollars forty-six cents, Rogers admitted that sum had' been received by Rogers & Sons, from Lambert and. Brothers, in New York; and that it was part of the proceeds of seventy-four'bales of cotton, shipped by Richards & Buckholts to Lambert & Brothers. •Very little was said about the item of three thousand dollars. Something was said between Buckholts and Rogers, about the righf to apply moneys to the payment of John Richards? • private debts: Buckholts contending that he had .no. right so to do, and Rogers that he had; but which particular item of payment the witness did not understand. This was all the evidence of payment introduced by the defendants to support the above two items of fourteen hundred and fifty dollars forty-six cents; and three thousand1 dollars, The witness stated;-that he had understood that John Richards had once failed, before' he went into partnership with Buckholts. It was admitted by the defendants, that the item of three thousand dollars was-for a bill of exchang'e, drawn in 1825 by Rogers & Sons on John.Richards alone.

The plaintiffs then introduced a letter written by John Richards to. the plaintiffs, dated at Natchez, June 6th, 1825, (and which.is in *229 the record,) Containing statements relative to a shipment of seventy-eight bales of cotton, made to Lambert & Co. and to certain payments which, the letter says,- we' have left in the hands of. Messrs. Lambert, Brothers & Co., to he divided among you arid them.” It then enumerates eight thousand five hundred and fifty dollars, intended.to pay my own debts;” and on account of Richards & Co. thre'e thousand dollars. It then adds, that the Sum of six hundred and fifty-four dollars fifty-five cents had been that • day sent to New Orleans to purchase exchange' on New. York, to be forwarded, and go to the payment of John Rienards and Co.’s debt to plaintiffs, and Messrs. 'Lambert, Brothers &■ Có. -

Upon- this, evidence, the plaintiffs requested the'court to- charge the jury, that the defendants were not entitled, upon the evidence before them, to the item of fourteen hundred and fifty dollars forty-six- cents,- as an, offset to the plaintiffs’ claim; and also that, the defendants were not entitled, upon the evidence before the jury; to the, item of the three'thousand'dollars, as an offset, which charge» the court refused to give, and in -our judgment, very properly refused to give, as it involved the determination of matter of. fact, properly belonging to the province of the jury.

-The defendants then requested the.court to charge the jury as follows: “ First, that if the jury believe the onset-of .fourteen hundred and. fifty dollars was the proceeds of cotton of". Richards & Buckholts, or John Richards & Co., shipped on their joint accounts., then it is a legal offset to a joint debt, and cannot be applied to an individual debt of John Richard's, without proof that Buckholts, -Was' himself consulted, and agreed to it. Second, that if the jury believed that the draft of three thousand dollars was paid by Richards . & Buckholts or John Richards & Co., or out of the effects of either qf those firms, with the knowledge of Rogers & Sons, then in law it is a legal otiset to the joint deht of the said Richards & Buckholts, or John Richards & Co.; and cannot be applied to the private debt of either partner, without the consent of the'other partner. Third,, that the letter of John Richards, .read in .this case, is not’- evidence against Buckholts, unless .the jury believe that' Buckholts knew of the letter, and sanctioned its contents.” The court gave the .charge as requested: and the present bill of exceptions has brought before us, for- consideration, the propriety of each of these instructions.

The first, instruction raises'these questions: whether the funds of a partnership can be rightfully applied by one partner to the. dis *230 charge of his own separate pre-existing debt, without the-assent, express or implied, of the Other, partner; and whether it makes any difference, in’ such a case, that the separate creditor had no knowledge at the time of the fact of the fund being partnership property. W-e are of opinion in the negative, on'both*questions. The implied authority of each pártnér to dispose of the partnership funds strictly and - rightfully exténds only to the business and transactions of .the partnership itself; and' any disposition of those funds, by any partner, beyond,such purposes;is an excess of his authority as partr.

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Bluebook (online)
37 U.S. 221, 9 L. Ed. 1063, 12 Pet. 221, 1838 U.S. LEXIS 355, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/n-rogers-sons-v-batchelor-scotus-1838.