Seufert v. Gille

131 S.W. 102, 230 Mo. 453, 1910 Mo. LEXIS 217
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 19, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 131 S.W. 102 (Seufert v. Gille) 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
Seufert v. Gille, 131 S.W. 102, 230 Mo. 453, 1910 Mo. LEXIS 217 (Mo. 1910).

Opinion

FOX, J.

From August, 1885, to June, 1891, James M. Gille and James Van Peyma were partners as hardware merchants in Kansas City, Missouri, and did business under the firm name of “Gille & Van Peyma.” The partnership was an unlimited one, each partner *462 having an equal share therein, and it did a general wholesale and retail hardware business. The business of the firm was largely done by Van Peyma, who was its active manager, and to him was left its banking business and the borrowing of money in its name. In June, 1891, a corporation was formed with James M. Grille, James Yan Peyma and others as stockholders, under the name of Galle Hardware & Iron Company, and the merchandise stock of the partnership was transferred to the corporation and constituted in part its assets or capital stock. In July, 1893, Yan Peyma borrowed from plaintiff, Louis Seufert, who was a farmer living near Leavenworth, in Kansas, $2000, and both Yan Peyma and plaintiff say Yan Peyma gave a note for that amount to plaintiff which Yan Peyma signed “Gille & Yan Peyma, James M. Gille, James Yan Peyma.” Yan Peyma says he turned the money over to the Gille Hardware & Iron Company, and credited the amount on the account of Gille & Yan Peyma, which was being carried on the books of the corporation. On April 27, 1894, Yan Peyma says he, in the name of Gille & Yan P'eyma, borrowed $1130 from plaintiff, gave the firm’s note, turned the money over to the corporation and credited the amount in like manner to said firm. This last transaction took place in the store where the corporation did business. The partnership account remained on the books of the corporation until 1902, and these ■notes were renewed at the same store, possibly annually, at least from 1896, by Yan Peyma, who signed the firm’s, his own and Gille’s names thereto, interest at eight per cent being calculated and added to the principal, until 1901, when they were combined in one note, which note was renewed July 1, 1902, and which renewal note is the note sued on, and which at the time amounted to $5150.86. It was signed “Gille & Yan Peyma, Jas. M. Gille, Jas. Yan Peyma,” and all the signatures were made by Yan Peyma.

*463 The defendant Gille denied the partnership at the time the note was given, and disputes Van Peyma’s authority to execute the note, and disputes his liability both individually and as a partner of Van Peyma; and that is the real issue in the case. Both Gille and Van Peyma are defendants in the case, but Van Peyma admitted the partnership and the signatures, and at the trial was plaintiff’s principal witness.

The questions of the existence of the partnership and of Van Peyma’s authority to sign the firm name and Gille’s name to the note were submitted to the jury, which returned a unanimous verdict against both defendants. Gille alone appeals.

The contention of appellant that the partnership had been dissolved, that it no longer existed when the note was given, and that Van Peyma had no authority to sign the firm name thereto, calls for a further elaboration of the facts. It may clarify the situation and narrow the issues to legal channels to state that plaintiff does not contend that Van Peyma had any authority to hind Gille individually and separately from his relationship as a partner; but he only contends that he had authority as a partner of the firm of Gille & Van Peyma to bind Gille, and that he signed Gille’s name to the note with the intention of binding him as a partner and not otherwise.

James M. Gille and James Van Peyma had formerly resided at Leavenworth, Kansas, and Gille conducted a" mercantile business there and had bought goods through Van Peyma who was a salesman for some wholesale hardware house. Plaintiff Seufert resided about seventeen miles from Leavenworth and he and Van Peyma had known each other for years, and had been friends in New York prior to taking up their abode in Kansas in about 1868. Gille had a slight acquaintance with Suefert, who traded with him in a small way at his store. In 1885 Gille and Van Peyma formed a partnership as hardware merchants, under *464 the firm name of Gille & Van Peyma, and had a store on Union avenue in Kansas City, Missouri. This business they conducted at that store until about 1890, when they moved to another at Santa Fe and St. Louis avenues, and continued to do business there as a partnership' under the same name until (at least) June 1, 1891. During these years plaintiff bought some goods from the firm, occasionally was at their store, both as a visitor and a customer, but they borrowed no money from him. Van Peyma did borrow money in the name of the firm from banks, and gave the firm’s notes, and some of these notes Mr. Gille thought he executed, but could recall no specific one. The checks were signed, in the main, by Van Peyma.

On June 1, 1891, the corporation, Gille Hardware & Iron Company, was organized with a capital stock of $150,000. Of this stock $60,000 was issued to Gille, $30,000 to Van Peyma, and Gille gave $5000’ of his stock to his son,’ Henry S. Gille,' and sold $5000 to "W. H. Adams, and Van Peyma about 1892 or 1893 sold $5000 of his stock to Charles Seufert, plaintiff’s son. The balance of the stock ($60,000) was issued to W. F. Hall, E. F. Townsend, H. M. Evans, and $35,000 of it to A. D. Bayless, and possibly some others got some. About this time the firm bought a stock of hardware from another concern, which is styled the “Halls & Wills” stock, amounting, so some of the witnesses say, to $100,000', but how it was paid for, whether by the money of Gille or that of Gille & Van Peyma, or whether it was paid for by this $60,000 of stock, or by money of the corporation, the evidence fails to reveal. It does show, however, that Gille put some money into the corporation, and that may explain why twice as much stock was issued to him as was issued to Van Peyma. The entire stock of merchandise belonging to the firm of Gille & Van Peyma was turned over to the corporation, and in payment thereof the certificates of stock above mentioned were issued to Van Peyma and Gille, individ *465 ually. The inventory of the partnership on June 1, 1891, amounted to $184,253.90, and that represented the stook of merchandise turned over to the Gille Hardware Iron Company. After that time the corporation continued to do a general mercantile business, both wholesale and retail, at the store at Santa Fe and St. Louis avenues, and later, but at just what date does not appear, moved to Walnut street, and continued to do business there until- it made an assignment in January, 1903.

When the stock of merchandise of the firm was turned over to the corporation on June .l, 1891, the partnership of Gille & Van Peyma ceased to buy and sell goods. It owed debts’ and debts were due to it, and Van Peyma testified that at that time the corporation was indebted to the partnership, in an- amount which he places at twenty or twenty-five thousand dollars, and that “the corporation was in our debt for a long time;” but he also says that when he got the money from plaintiff the partnership was “heavily in debt to the corporation,” that “things had changed,” and that after the corporation was formed the partnership did nothing except collect money owing it, pay its debts and’handle a little real estate on which the firm held mortgages.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
131 S.W. 102, 230 Mo. 453, 1910 Mo. LEXIS 217, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seufert-v-gille-mo-1910.