Pease v. Cole

22 A. 681, 53 Conn. 53, 1885 Conn. LEXIS 35
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedAugust 28, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 22 A. 681 (Pease v. Cole) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pease v. Cole, 22 A. 681, 53 Conn. 53, 1885 Conn. LEXIS 35 (Colo. 1885).

Opinion

Loomis, J.

The question involved in this case is, whether one member of a copartnership formed for the purpose of conducting a theater in Hartford, could, under the circumstances mentioned in the finding, bind the other member by executing a negotiable promissory note in the name of the firm for money borrowed.

The finding in terms excludes all express authority of the other partner, and even all knowledge of the matter on his part. So that any conclusion that the note is the note of the firm rather than of the member executing it, must necessarily rest on an authority to be implied. But here again the facts found so circumscribe the range of inquiry as to exclude all the ordinary sources of such authority.

The circumstances from which an authority may be implied are identical with those involved in a question of ordinary agency, for each partner is regarded as the accredited agent of the rest.

In many cases the decisive fact is found in the customary course of dealing, but not so here, for it is found that the note in question was the only note ever given in the name of the firm. The copartnership first commenced business in August, 1883, and on the 24th of the same month the note in suit was given. There was therefore very little time for a course of conduct or usage of any sort to grow up, giving any apparent authority.

The'finding traces the money borrowed only into the hands of McCarthy, the partner who signed the firm name, and no fact appears showing directly or presumptively that *60 the act was necessary for any of the purposes of the partnership.

The only remaining source from which an authority may he derived by implication must be sought in the nature and scope of the partnership and in the nature of the act. And here, if we examine the legal principles that are applicable, it will be found not only that all such implication is wanting, but that the presumption is directly against the authority assumed. The weight of authority in the United States and the uniform tenor of the authorities in England will be found to establish a controlling distinction in respect to implied authority between commercial or trading and non-trading partnerships. Story on Partnership. 6th ed., § 102, a; 1 Lindley on Partnership, 4th ed. (by Ewell), top, page 266 and note 1 and cases there cited; 1 Collyer on Partnership, 648, 658 ; Metcalf on Contracts, 121, and cases cited in the notes.

In a commercial partnership each acting partner is its general agent, with implied' authority to act for the firm in all matters within the scope of its business, and the presumption of law is that all commercial paper which bears the signature of the firm, executed by one of the partners, is the paper of the partnership, for the reason that the giving of such notes would be within the usual course of mercantile transactions.

But when we pass to non-trading partnerships the doctrine of general agency does not apply, and there is no presumption of authority to support the act of one partner. Hence, in order to subject the firm upon a bill or note executed by one partner in its name, a course of conduct, or usage, or other- facts sufficient to warrant the conclusion that the acting partner had been invested by his co-partners with the requisite authority, must appear, or that the firm has ratified the act by receiving the benefit of it.

That the partnership in question belongs to the non-trading class seems so obvious as to need no discussion. The brief in behalf of the defendant Cole cites many cases, and gives a long list of pursuits and professions *61 which those cases establish as of the non-trading class, and although the conduct of a theater is not there mentioned yet the analogies manifestly include it.

To show the existence of the distinction contended for and its application, we select from a multitude of authorities the following in addition to those previously referred to.

In Judge v. Brasswell, 13 Bush, (Ky.,) 67, the defendants were partners under an agreement to engage in mining business upon lands then leased or which might be thereafter acquired. One of the members of the firm purchased, without the others’ consent, and took conveyances of mining land in the name of the firm, and gave the bills of the firm therefor. In an action by the payee of the bills against the firm, a defense was made by the other partners that the purchase was without their consent or ratification, and in the plea they renounced all claim to the lands purchased. The court held that the firm was not liable on the bills, saying that the power of one partner to bind his co-partners rests alone on the usage of merchants, and does not amount to a rule of law in any other than commercial partnerships. In noncommercial partnerships one who seeks to hold the firm bound upon a contract made by a single member, must be able to show either express authority or that such is the customary usage of the particular branch of business in which the firm is engaged, or such facts as will warrant the conclusion that the partner had been invested by his co-partners with the requisite authority.

In Hedley v. Bainbridge, 3 Queen’s Bench, 316, the defendants were attorneys in partnership, and one of the partners gave a note in the name of the firm to the plaintiffs for the balance of advancements made to one partner who was acting in behalf of the firm ; the advances were, to be laid out on mortgage by the firm. Lord Desman, G. J., in giving the opinion said:—“ No doubt a debt was due from the firm ; but it does not follow that one partner had authority to give a promissory note for that debt. Partners in trade have authority, as regards third persons, to bind the firm by bills of exchange, for it is the usual course of *62 mercantile transactions so to do; and this authority is by the custom and law of merchants, which is part of the general law of the land. But the same reason does not apply to other partnerships. There is no custom or usage that attorneys should be parties to negotiable instruments; nor is it necessary for the purposes of their business. * * * Upon the whole we think that the implied authority is confined to partners in trade.”

In Dickinson v. Valpy, 10 Barn. & Cress., 128, the plaintiff was an indorsee for value of a bill of exchange drawn and accepted in the name of a mining partnership by order of its regular directors. It was held incumbent on the plaintiff to prove that the directors had authority to bind the company, and that it was necessary for the purpose of carrying on the business of the company or usual for other similar mining companies to draw or accept bills of exchange. Opinions were given by Lord Tenterden, C. J., and Judges Bailey, Littledale and Parke, and the same distinction was made as in other cases between trading and non-trading partnerships. See also Greenslade v. Dower & Coleman, 7 Barn. & Cress., 635.

In Levy v. Pyne Richards, tried before Baron Alderson, 1 Car. & Marsh., 453, it was held, that “ if a bill of exchange or promissory note be drawn, accepted or indorsed, by one of two persons who are partners in a business which is not a trade (e. g.

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Bluebook (online)
22 A. 681, 53 Conn. 53, 1885 Conn. LEXIS 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pease-v-cole-conn-1885.