Robinson v. First Natinal Bank

82 S.W. 505, 98 Tex. 184, 1904 Tex. LEXIS 235
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 31, 1904
DocketNo. 1352.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 82 S.W. 505 (Robinson v. First Natinal Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robinson v. First Natinal Bank, 82 S.W. 505, 98 Tex. 184, 1904 Tex. LEXIS 235 (Tex. 1904).

Opinion

GAINES, Chief Justice.

This suit was brought by defendant in error against J. H. Robinson, W. A. Hoskins, B. F. Pierce and J. A. Saxon to recover a promissory note signed in the name of Saxon, Pierce & Co., and by Pierce and Saxon individually. The parties defendant were alleged to be a partnership doing business under the name of Saxon, Pierce & Co. Robinson and Hoskins pleaded under oath denying the alleged partnership. Saxon and Pierce pleaded that they had been discharged in bankruptcy. To this plea the plaintiff replied by supplemental petition, that if in fact Robinson and Hoskins were not partners, in the alleged firm the plaintiff was induced to make the loan by the false and fraudulent representations of Saxon and Pierce, that they were such, and that therefore the debt was not discharged. There was a verdict against Robinson and Hoskins for the balance due on the note and in favor of Saxon and Pierce upon their plea in bankruptcy. There was a judgment accordingly, from which Robinson and Hoskins appealed to the Court of Civil Appeals, in which the judgment was affirmed. They have procured a writ of error from this court. During the course of the trial one Kelly was permitted to testify to declarations made to him by defendant Saxon, when neither defendant Robinson nor defendant Hos-kins was present. The testimony admitted was as follows: “That in January, 1903, at Marietta, I. T., the defendant J. A. Saxon in conversation with him offered to “sell him the interest of the defendants J. H. Robinson and W. A. Hoskins in the business at Marietta that was then being run under the name of Saxon, Pierce & Co., and stated to him that said Robinson and Hoskins were partners in said business.”

We are of opinion that it was error to admit this testimony. Before the declarations were admitted, testimony had been produced which tended to show that Robinson and Hoskins were partners of Saxon and Pierce. As a general rule,, the declarations of one tending to show his partnership with another are not admissible for the purpose of showing such partnership. Brown v. Watson, 72 Texas, 216; Buzard v. Jolly, 6 S. W. Rep., 422—a case of agency to which the same principle applies. There is authority, however, which qualifies the rule to the extent of holding that, if there be evidence already introduced which tends to show a partnership, the declarations of "one of the alleged partners is *188 admissible to corroborate that evidence. The cases which we have found and which apparently recognize this exception are not very fully reported and leave us in doubt as to what the courts did really intend to decide. That is to say, it is not clear that the declarations were admitted to prove the partnership. Where the question of partnership is involved and evidence tending to show a partnership sufficient to authorize a jury to find its existence has been introduced, then the declarations of one of the alleged partners are admissible in so far as they tend to show liability on part of the partnership. The courts which allow the exception seem to us-to have been misled by the doctrine just announced. But the principles applicable to the issue of partnership or not, and to that of the liability of the partnership, whoever may constitute it, are widely different. The declarations of a partner are admissible as against the firm, because he is the agent of the firm. Hence, if the partnership be disputed and there be evidence to show a partnership, the declarations of the alleged partner which go to show the partnership’s liability for the debt are admissible and should go to the jury, with the instruction that they are to be disregarded provided they should find that the fact of partnership is not established. But where the declarations bear solely upon the issue of partnership or not, we see no good reason for their admission. If the partnership be already established beyond question, then their admission is unnecessary. Declarations as against a third party are but hearsay and as such are not evidence. A party’s own declarations, being his admissions, are evidence against him; and the declarations of one whom he has authorized to speak for him, such as his agent or partner, stand upon the same footing. But where the authority to represent him is the very question at issue, it is illogical to say that the declarations of one whose authority is in dispute are admissible upon the question of that authority. Hence, as has been said, the general rule is well settled, that, upon that question, his declarations are illegal, and we fail to see how the fact that the evidence is offered in corroboration can make it legal when it was before illegal. The point was clearly presented in the case of Robbins v. Willard (6 Pick., Mass., 464), and the decision is briefly reported as follows: “Willard was defaulted,, and after prima facie evidence of a partnership had been given his declarations were admitted for the purpose of satisfying the jury of the existence of the partnership; but the court were clear that the evidence was inadmissible for that purpose. Citing Tuttle v. Cooper, 5 Pick., 414, 2 ed., 417, note 1.”

For the same reason we think- it was error not to exclude the testimony of the witness Walker, which was objected to by defendants Robinson and Hoskins.

Hpon the principles announced we also think the notice of dissolution should have been excluded.

The testimony of Butler, the cashier of the plaintiff bank, presents a different question. The witness testified, that, at the time of making *189 the loan and before the transaction was consummated, both Saxon and Pierce stated to him that Robinson and Hoskins were partners in the business. The case seems to have been tried upon the theory that if Saxon and Pierce procured the loan by the representation that Robinson and Hoskins were partners with them in the busmess and that this representation was false, the discharge in bankruptcy would not exempt them from liability for the debt. The original bankrupt act admits of the construction that only debts created by fraud which had been reduced to judgment before the discharge were not discharged by it. The amendment of 1903 leaves no doubt upon this question, but the discharge in the case was granted before that amendment was passed. We have our doubts whether this theory was correct. But since the verdict and judgment were in favor of Saxon and Pierce, and the plaintiff has not appealed, we need not determine that question. That issue is no longer in the case. If a debt created by fraud and not reduced to judgment before the discharge in bankruptcy, was not discharged, then the evidence was admissible against Saxon and Pierce upon the issue of fraud. But even if the evidence was admissible, under that or any other issue except as to that of the existence of the partnership as claimed, the court erred in refusing the third requested instruction which would have limited its consideration to an issue upon which it was admissible.

We are also of opinion that the fact that a short time before the stock of goods was removed to Marietta Robinson had transferred all his lands in Cooke County to his wife and sister in payment of debts due them was without probative force and should have been excluded by the trial court.

The facts in evidence upon the trial of the case were as follows: The Saxon Mercantile Company was a corporation organized under the laws of Texas, doing a mercantile busmess at Myra, in Cooke County. The defendants in this suit were the only stockholders of the concern.

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Bluebook (online)
82 S.W. 505, 98 Tex. 184, 1904 Tex. LEXIS 235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robinson-v-first-natinal-bank-tex-1904.