Rimel v. Hayes

83 Mo. 200
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 15, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 83 Mo. 200 (Rimel v. Hayes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rimel v. Hayes, 83 Mo. 200 (Mo. 1884).

Opinion

Philips, C.

This action originated in a justice’s court, based on the following account filed with the justice:

“ J. R. Smith, W. C. Hayes and Wm. P. Eager,
In account with Isaac Rimel. To hauling 902 railroad ties, at 7 cts..a tie...... $63.14”

There was no service on the party, Smith, and the action ivas dismissed as to him. The defendant, Eager, was served Avith summons. An alias summons was issued and the defendant, Hayes, was brought in thereunder. Judgment in the justice’s court for plaintiff, and defendants appealed to the circuit court where, after one mistrial, the plaintiff again recovered judgment, and defendants prosecute this writ of error.

The evidence showed that the firm of “Hayes, Eager & Co.” were in the spring of 1878 engaged in the business of general merchandise at the town of Overton in Cooper county. The firm was composed of Wm. Gr. Hayes, Wm. P. Eager and H. Wooldridge. During that spring, about March and April, the said J. R. Smith appeared in the neighborhood and circulated the folloAAdng hand bill:

“WANTED,
100 Tie Makers.
To make ties in Cooper and Moniteau counties, Mo. Will pay from 11 to 12J cents per tie; Avill pay every day or each week as desired. Cross at Rocheport and enquire for the tie works of Hayes, Eager & Co., eight miles below Over-ton, Cooper county, Mo.
J. R. Smith ; Hayes, Eager & Co.”

Yarious parties applied to Smith and made contracts for getting out and hauling ties. Among them was [204]*204plaintiff, who did. hauling to the amount claimed in his account. He seeks in this action to hold the defendants responsible for his work' on the ground that they were partners with Smith in this matter. This the defendants resist on the ground, that they were not such partners with Smith and had nothing to do with plaintiff ’ s contract. The plaintiff while not claiming the defendants apd Smith were partners inter sese, yet seeks to recover on the ground that they held themselves out to the community as such partners, and that plaintiff entered into the contract with Smith and performed the work sued for on the faith of the existence of such partnership. Much evidence was offered, pro and con., touching this issue, so much of which as bears on the error •assigned will be noticed *in the course of this opinion.

I. As there was no sufficient evidence of the existence of a partnership in fact between Smith and defendants in the tie business in question, the plaintiff sought to hold defendants liable on the ground that by their acts, conduct and declarations, they appeared before the public as such partners, and the plaintiff entered into the given contract and rendered the service sued for on the faith of the fact that they were jointly interested with Smith. As proof touching the issue the plaintiff, over the objection of defendant, was permitted to introduce in •evidence a conversation had between one Stock and said Smith in which Smith is alleged to have said: “Hayes Eager & Co. were in partnership with him,” and, perhaps, some other witness testified to other conversations had with Smith. Neither of defendants was present at such conversation. Upon what principle these statements were admitted against these defendants is not apparent. Smith was not a party to the record, and consequently the statement could not be admitted for the purpose of binding him. It was not competent against the defendants because he was a stranger to the record. If it be defended as the statement or admission of a co-partner, on the idea that one partner is the agent of the others, it is [205]*205manifest the proposition assumes the very matter in controversy, to-wit: does the partnership exist ? A fact-to be found aliunde by the jury. The injustice of this-evidence becomes the more glaring when it is observed that its tendency was to establish the existence of a partnership inter sese between defendants and Smith, whereas the court, on objection by plaintiff, excluded altogether the proffered evidence by defendants to show there was no such partnership in fact. Neither this, nor any other statement made by Smith, in the absence and without-the sanction of defendants, had a tendency to prove that-defendants held themselves out as partners of Smith. It was ho declaration of theirs.

This character of evidence has been uniformly repudiated by the courts. Smith v. Hulett, 65 Ill. 495, is directly in point. It was an action of assumpsit commenced against Smith, Bishop and Griffin. Smith and Bishop only were served. Griffin was not summoned, nor did he appear to the action. The effort was to charge-Smith and Bishop by virtue of an alleged partnership between them and Griffin. Much evidence, there as here, was-introduced to establish the existence of the partnership. Against the defendants’ objection the declarations of Griffin were admitted to prove the fact of partnership. The court say: “ Griffin, although his name was included in the summons, never having been served with process, was not a party to the suit. No judgment could have-been had against him. Nothing was required to be proved against him in order to sustain a judgment against Mm. If there had been, his admission would have been competent. But the proof was only to be made as-against Smith and Bishop in order to recover a judgment against them. Although the partnership between the-three was to be proved, it must have been done by competent evidence. As against Smith and Bishop the-declarations of Griffin were not competent evidence to prove a partnership. One man can not thus affect another by his declarations. If Griffin had been a party to the-[206]*206suit Ms declarations would have been admissible as against himself where material to obtain a judgment against him, but as he was not a party there is no ground upon which they could be let in to prove the fact of partnership.” Citing 1 Greenlf. Ev., 177; Degan v. Singer, 41 Ill. 28; Dutton v. Woodman, 9 Cush. 256; Robbins v. Willard, 6 Pick. 464. In Freeman v. Bloomfield, 43 Mo. 393, it seems to have been taken nem. eon. that such “declaration alone if actually made can in no way bind” the defendants. It would be not only unjust, but liable to grossest abuse to admit the declarations of an irresponsible imputed partner, not sued even, to fix upon others the fact of a partnership with himself.

II. In two or more instances plaintiff introduced evidence of the acts and statements of said Wooldridge, touching the hauling and paying for ties without, perhaps, sufficiently connecting the defendants therewith. Wooldridge was not a party to this suit. He is not even named in the account exhibited by plaintiff as the basis of his statement. It is true the evidence discloses that he was a member of the mercantile firm of Hayes, Eager & Co. But his power and agency to bind his co-partners would, on well-settled principles, be limited to matters connected with such mercantile transactions. On the principles of law just applied to the statement of Smith, this evidence was incompetent, unless followed up with proof of the assent or ratification of the defendants. Freeman v. Bloomfield, 43 Mo. 393.

The following instruction numbered 13, asked by the defendants, should have been given:

“ It is in evidence in this case that Wm. Gr. Hayes, W. P. Eager andH. H.

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Bluebook (online)
83 Mo. 200, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rimel-v-hayes-mo-1884.