Ruiz v. Kiehm's Pharmacy

37 So. 2d 720, 1948 La. App. LEXIS 636
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 29, 1948
DocketNo. 18983.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 37 So. 2d 720 (Ruiz v. Kiehm's Pharmacy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ruiz v. Kiehm's Pharmacy, 37 So. 2d 720, 1948 La. App. LEXIS 636 (La. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

This is a suit by a real estate agent for a commission alleged to be due as the result of a sale by the defendant partnership of a "drugstore" formerly owned and operated by it and which had been listed for sale with the plaintiff real estate agent. Plaintiff also claims attorney's fees as stipulated in the contract.

Defendants excepted to the petition on the ground that the contract with the agent was not signed in the name of the partnership but by one of the individual members in his own name. When this exception and another exception of vagueness were overruled, defendants answered, admitting that a contract had been entered into between one of the members of the partnership and plaintiff and also that the "drugstore" had been sold, but averring that the sale was effected after the expiration of the contract and that the purchaser was some one with whom the agent had not been negotiating during the term of the contract.

It was conceded that the price received was $13,132.86, and that the contract with plaintiff stipulated for an attorney's fee of twenty-five per cent in the event it became necessary to employ counsel.

There was judgment in favor of plaintiff, against defendants, solidarily, for $1641.61, which included the attorney's fees. Defendants have appealed.

Before considering the merits of the case, we shall investigate the effect of the fact that the contract on which the suit is based was signed only by W. J. Kiehm and not in the name of the partnership.

It is obvious that the partnership is a commercial one. Article 2825 of the Civil Code provides in paragraphs 1 and 2 as follows:

"Commercial partnerships are such as are formed:

"1. For the purchase of any personal property and the sale thereof, either in the same state or changed by manufacture. *Page 722

"2. For buying or selling any personal property whatever, as factors or brokers."

The second paragraph of Article 2872 provides that:

"Commercial partners are bound in solido for the debts of the partnership."

There is no controversy over these questions, but defendants say that since the partnership had nothing to do with the signing of the contract, the partnership is not liable and the other individual partners are not liable.

However, the drugstore was owned and operated by the partnership, the contract for its sale was made on behalf of the partnership, and later when it was sold, it was sold by the partnership. Therefore, we conclude that when W. J. Kiehm signed the contract with plaintiff, he did so on behalf of the partnership.

In Hynes v. Kirkman, 4 La. 47, appears the following:

"Hence, it follows, that as the copartner of the defendant in a mercantile firm, who owned the boat, or as joint owner of a boat, engaged in carrying goods on freight, the defendant was bound in solido with J. Kirkman, for the acts of the latter in relation to the boat. The circumstance of the defendant having engaged the plaintiff as master of the boat, in his, the defendant's, sole name, and not in that of the firm, while the boat was owned by and navigated for the firm, does not prevent the contract being that of the firm, binding both partners, in the same manner as if it had been clothed with the signature of the firm; and susceptible of being affected in its consequences, by the acts of either partner. Kimbal v. Blanc, 8 Mart., N.S., 386, 390."

In Penn v. Kearny, Blois Co., 21 La. Ann. 21, the Supreme Court said:

"In Reynolds v. Swain, 13 La. 193, 197, it was held by this court that where one of the defendants, sued as commercial partners, hired the premises in his individual name, but that the store was occupied until abandonment by the partnership, the latter circumstance showed that the contract was made for the affairs of the partnership, and the firm was therefore bound by the act of the partner, lessee, though made in his individual name."

See, also, Roth v. Moore, 19 La. Ann. 86.

That this principle is recognized in common law jurisdictions is shown by the following quotation from American Jurisprudence, Vol. 40, sec. 152, pp. 237, 238:

"Within the limits allowed by the articles of a general or commercial partnership, and during its continuance, each member has a right to bind his copartners to the performance of every contract he may make in the name of the partnership. A partner cannot, however, bind his copartners beyond such limits. It is not necessary in order to bind a partnership that the contract be signed by all of the partners; a contract signed by one partner having authority, with intent to bind the firm, if so accepted, is binding on the firm.

"To render the partnership liable in case of an ordinary written contract, it is not essential that the name of the firm or partnership be mentioned in the writing. The fact that a contract signed by one partner was a partnership matter may be established by the testimony of the signers. Thus, it may be shown that an obligation under seal executed by all the members of a firm, in and for its business, and for its benefit, binds the firm, although the firm name is not mentioned, and although it appears on its face to be simply the obligation of the partners contracted in their individual names."

The principle is also stated in Corpus Juris, Vol. 47, sec. 304, p. 841, as follows:

"A contract or transaction connected with the firm business and within the apparent scope of such business, in the name of an individual partner, is binding on the firm and all the partners where such individual name has been adopted as the firm name, or where the partners have consented to, or acquiesced in, the use of the individual partner's name in firm transactions. Even where the firm name is different from that of a member, if the contract is intended to be a partnership contract, a partner may bind the firm and other partners by executing the contract in his individual name, * * *" *Page 723

The drugstore or pharmacy in question was owned by the partnership and was known as Kiehm's Pharmacy. The partnership was composed of Walter J. Kiehm, Norman L. Kiehm and Mrs. Annie Norman, and it was operated by Walter J. Kiehm. The partnership did not own the building or the land on which it was located.

The contract on which the suit is based was signed on March 28th, 1947, and under it the plaintiff, John E. Ruiz, was employed "to find a buyer for the property". It was stipulated that the price would be $25,000.00 cash, or "for any other price, or term hereafter agreed upon * * *." It was also stipulated that if sold the vendor would pay "a commission at the regular rate of 10% on the gross amount" of the sale and that in the event of the necessity of employment of counsel to enforce the contract the vendor would pay twenty-five per cent additional as attorney's fees.

It was provided that the contract should remain effective for thirty days and that during that time it would be exclusive, and it was further stipulated that the commission would be earned by the real estate agent should any contract of sale be made by the owners "within forty-five days after the expiration or termination of this contract, with anyone to whom said property has been quoted, during the term of this contract." It is admitted that the original thirty-day term of the contract with plaintiff had expired on May 23rd, 1947, when the contract for the sale of the property was made by defendants.

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Bluebook (online)
37 So. 2d 720, 1948 La. App. LEXIS 636, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ruiz-v-kiehms-pharmacy-lactapp-1948.