Roberts v. Toney

131 S.E. 552, 100 W. Va. 688, 1926 W. Va. LEXIS 27
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 2, 1926
Docket5423
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 131 S.E. 552 (Roberts v. Toney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roberts v. Toney, 131 S.E. 552, 100 W. Va. 688, 1926 W. Va. LEXIS 27 (W. Va. 1926).

Opinion

Woods; Judge:

This is an action in assumpsit prosecuted by R. R. Roberts in the circuit court of Mercer county against M. P. Beamer, M. T. Blessing and L. G. Toney, trading and doing business under the firm name of Beamer Red Ash Coal Company. A judgment having been taken against the plaintiff, Roberts, on account of his indorsement for accommodation on a note of said partnership and his having been made liable for a part of the payment thereon, he seeks recovery in this action for the amount paid by him on account of his indorsement for said partnership, claiming that the defendant L. G. Toney was a member of said partnership.

Plaintiff filed an original and amended declaration. In the original a demurrer thereto was sustained and the plaintiff permitted to file an amended declaration, both of which are in assumpsit, and to which amended declaration the defendant L. G. Toney demurred, but said demurrer was overruled. Toney then filed a special plea in writing, denying that he was ever- a partner in partnership with M. P. Beamer and M. T. Blessing, trading as Beamer Red Ash' Coal Company, .and also pleaded non-assumpsit, to which pleas the plaintiff replied generally. Both issues were tried jointly and the jury found a verdict for the plaintiff thereon and assessed his recovery at the sum of $600.00; which verdict the defendant L. G. Toney moved to set aside and grant him a new trial, but the court overruled said motion and rendered judgment thereon. Prom this action Toney appeals.

The defendant’s assignments of error are: (1) The demurrer to the original and amended declarations herein should have been sustained, because the original declaration proceeds against the three named defendants as individuals and the account filed therewith is against them as partners; and that the amended declaration is inconsistent with the original declaration, in this, that without dismissing the original action, the plaintiff simply amends and then proceeds against this defendant as a partner. (2) Assuming the *691 defendant L. G-. Toney to have been a partner in the said Beamer Red Ash Coal Company, before proceeding against him as such, the other two partners should have not only been made parties to this action, but process on them should have been served. (3) That the evidence in this case fails to establish as a matter of law that the defendant L. G. Toney was ever at any time a partner with the said M. F. Beamer and M. T. Blessing, trading as Beamer Red Ash Coal Company.

Beamer, Blessing and Toney were all three named in the writ as partners, trading and doing business as Beamer Red Ash Coal Company; and in the bill of particulars filed with the original declaration, they were likewise designated as such. The declaration inadvertently omitted to so describe them. The amended declaration was filed by leave of the court to cure this defect. Such amendment plainly falls within the scope of^the statute. Code, chap. 125, § 12. A variance between the writ and declaration may be amended at any time before judgment, if substantial justice may be done thereby. Courson v. Parker, 39 W. Va. 521. All the plaintiff did in this case was to make the original writ and declaration correspond; and as a matter of course the amended declaration superseded the original and the two pleas of the defendant — denying partnership, and non-assumpsit — -filed herein responded to the amended pleading.

The second ground of error rests upon the mistaken belief that the individuals composing the partnership must not only be sued, but that all must have been served with process before trial. It is well established and an elementary rule in courts of chancery that all parties interested in the subject matter in controversy must be parties to the suit and served with process therein or be notified thereof by publication. Brown v. Gorsuch & Sons, 50 W. Va. 514. A different rule prevails in courts of law. The common law rule is that a partnership name is a mere matter of description and is not a thing in any way distinct from the members composing it. “All contracts with partners are joint and several, and every partner is liable to pay the whole, and in what proportion the others are contributors is a matter merely among themselves. The plaintiff may, however, bring his action against one, but *692 the defendant may compel by plea in abatement the plaintiff to join them; but, if one partner is out of the kingdom, and not amenable to the process of the court, the plaintiff may proceed singly against the other.” 2 Tucker Bl. Comm. 141. This principle finds support in 1 Wils. 7; Brown v. Belcher, 1 Wash. (Va.) 9; Courson v. Parker, supra. Partners must be sued in their individual names and cannot be sued in their partnership name. Story, Partn. Sec. 241, note 2. The foregoing principles make suits at law against partnerships answerable to our statutory provisions governing rules and pleadings. “Where, in any action against two or more defendants, the process is served against part of them, the plaintiff may proceed to judgment as to any so served, and either discontinue it as to the others or from time to time as the process is served as to such others, proceed to judgment as to them until judgment be obtained against all. Such discontinuance of the action as to any defendant not served with process shall not operate as a bar of any subsequent action which may be brought against him for the same cause.” Code, Chap. 125, § 52. Under the statute just quoted the court properly in this case permitted the plaintiff to proceed to judgment against Toney, who alone of the partnership members was served with process.

The only question remaining is: Does the evidence establish a partnership Í On an issue as to the existence of a partnership — where denied as here — he who asserts it, of course, carries the burden of proof. Harris v. Welch, 87 W. Va. 154. Beamer testified that there was a partnership; that a written memorandum of such agreement was drawn up and signed by all the partners (including Toney), which agreement was later destroyed at the suggestion of Toney; and that the note in question here was for the purpose of obtaining funds for the partnership and was executed during the term thereof, and said funds applied to the business. This is proper testimony. On an issue as to the existence of a partnership one of the partners is competent to prove that a partnership existed. 30 Cyc. 405; Franklin v. Hoadley, 115 N. Y. App. Div. 538. It further appears from the testimony of Beamer that as a consideration for a one-third interest in the said *693 partnership, that Toney, who was president of a bank, secured a loan of $5,000.00 for the purposes of said partnership from another banking institution, on collateral security furnished by the latter. Roberts, the plaintiff, who signed the Beamer Red Ash Coal Company note, as accommodation indorser, testified that Toney told him he had an interest in the partnership, before he indorsed the note, and that later, after he was compelled by judgment of the court to pay a portion of said note, that Toney again admitted to him his interest in the company. This testimony'is countervailed only by the general denial of Toney.

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Bluebook (online)
131 S.E. 552, 100 W. Va. 688, 1926 W. Va. LEXIS 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roberts-v-toney-wva-1926.