Nellis & Co. v. Green & Stallworth

137 S.E. 843, 36 Ga. App. 684, 1927 Ga. App. LEXIS 252
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedApril 16, 1927
Docket17597
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 137 S.E. 843 (Nellis & Co. v. Green & Stallworth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nellis & Co. v. Green & Stallworth, 137 S.E. 843, 36 Ga. App. 684, 1927 Ga. App. LEXIS 252 (Ga. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

Bell, J.

This was a suit by Green and Stallworth, alleged to be a partnership composed of Miles L. Green and Paul Stallworth, against F. E. Nellis & Company, a corporation, to recover an amount which the plaintiffs claimed the defendant was due them as the proceeds of certain peaches sold by the defendant for the plaintiffs on commission. The trial resulted in a verdict in favor of the plaintiffs and the case is here upon exceptions by the defendant to the overruling of its motion for a new trial. The defendant’s contentions under the general grounds of the motion are that the evidence showed conclusively that the plaintiffs were not partners, but that, whether they were so or not, the defendant had fully paid the amount of the alleged debt by applying the same as a credit to indebtedness due to the defendant by Miles L. Green individually, with whom the defendant dealt without knowledge of the alleged partnership. In the special grounds of the motion, error is assigned upon two excerpts from the charge of the court and upon the admission of certain evidence.

Miles L. Green testified: “I know Paul.Stallworth. I knew him during the peach season of 1924. I was connected with him in a business matter in connection with his crop of peaches. He was a peach grower, and, as far as my connection with him was concerned, I bought a half interest in his peaches located at Bonaire on the terms I was to furnish and pay all expenses after he delivered them to the packing shed, and we would go fifty-fifty on the crop. Paul Stallworth and myself composed the firm. . . I agreed personally to buy one half interest for furnishing the baskets and paying all expenses after delivery to the sheds.” Paul Stallworth testified as follows: “I had a crop of peaches at Bonaire in 1924. I made a trade with Myles L. Green about them. My final trade with Mr. Green was that I agreed to pick the peaches and deliver them to the little shed I had on the place, and he was to furnish the bushel baskets to ship them in, and pack them and ship them through Nellis & Company, and we were to split the net profits fifty-fifty. I have never received any payment out of these peaches. The first time that I saw Mr. Schacht was during court here when we had the other trial. I never did talk with him in connection with this peach deal. . I have talked to [686]*686several besides Green. I have never talked to any of Nellis & Company’s people. I had not gotten to the place when I was pretty desperate on that fruit crop that year, but I felt like I ought to get something out of it with good fruit, and the returns showed they brought very good prices, considering the large crop of peaches. Mr. Green and myself had no definite arrangement if any loss took place; the only arrangement was that we were to split the profits; he was to pack the fruit and ship it, and I was to split the returns. If the fruit had gone in the market bad and there had been a loss instead of a gain, I suppose I would have my part of the freight. There was no agreement with reference to that. We had good fruit, and naturally we did not expect anything like that. All that I discussed with Mr. Green was the profit end of it; that was just the agreement we had. We had no arrangement about losses; we agreed to split the net profits fifty-fifty; half of it was mine and half of it was his. If there had been any loss, they could have collected it out of me. I have got a home and it is paid for, and no encumbrance on it.- I was sick that summer; that is why I did like I did. I was in the hospital fifteen days while he was handling these peaches. Mr. Green was to have complete control of the selling end and do the shipping; it was agreed they were to be shipped to Nellis & Company. I was not to have anything to do with that end of it unless I saw fit; I left that up to Mr. Green, and I didn’t know anything about it.”

The following further facts were developed by the evidence: During the season of 1924 the defendant sold peaches on commission for various growers in the Fort Valley section. They were represented locally by E. L. Schacht, as general agent. Green controlled the marketing of peaches for several growers during that season, and sold the same through Nellis & Company; as to which the transactions between him and this company were substantially the same as those relating to the peaches produced by Stallworth. The defendant advanced money to him at various times, aggregating for. the season about $5,000. The evidence is undisputed that the net proceeds of the Stallworth peaches, handled by the defendant, were entered as a credit on its account against Green as an individual for such advances. The defendant actually made no payment to any one for the Stallworth peaches. On the other [687]*687hand, it kept the proceeds and only made book entries with reference thereto. By far the larger portion of the advances to Green were undoubtedly made by the defendant without reference to the character of Green’s connection with the Stallworth peaches, and the evidence may have warranted the inference that this was true as to all of such advances. Certainly a contrary inference was not demanded as to any except, perhaps, a few items aggregating but a small sum as compared with the proceeds of the Stallworth peaches, for which the plaintiffs sued. More than this, the evidence authorized the inference that before the defendant had any transaction with reference to the Stallworth peaches its agent, Schacht, was fully apprized of the arrangement between Green and Stallworth in regard thereto.

The portions of the court’s charge of which complaint is made are as follows:

(1) “If a contract was made between Green and Stallworth by which Green bought an interest in the peaches, and there was an agreement that he would contribute some material thing of value for the purpose of preparing those peaches for market, and they had a joint interest after the peaches were put in the bushel baskets, I charge you that if the peaches were put in the baskets in pursuance of a contract of that sort, in which transaction Green made an investment of material and money, that became partnership property, and therefore they would be partners, if that was done with one single venture only.”

(2) “If the contract was merely that Green was to furnish his services and pack the peaches, the case would be different. But if Green made an investment with an agreement that they would be equally interested in the peaches, and that contract was carried out and peaches were crated, using the money or material furnished by Green, in pursuance of a contract, .then that would be a partnership venture, or if there was a joint interest in profits and losses, it would be-a partnership. A joint interest means where both parties have an interest in the property itself as distinguished from air employee’s right to do labor with the understanding that his-compensation or wages depended upon the amount of profit made out of the venture. Where that is true, — that is, where the proposition is that one hires himself to another man for a part of the profits, — that would not be a partnership, if nothing more appears.”

[688]*688It is insisted that these charges 'Were erroneous because they contained expressions of opinion as to what had been proved and as to whether the.partnership existed as alleged in the petition, and because they 'were contrary to law in that, under the facts stated, the plaintiffs were not partners.

The evidence to which objection was made was ..the testimony of Green in reference to a suit brought by him as an individual against Nellis &

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Bluebook (online)
137 S.E. 843, 36 Ga. App. 684, 1927 Ga. App. LEXIS 252, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nellis-co-v-green-stallworth-gactapp-1927.