Steiner, Lobman & Frank v. T. S. Faulk & Co.
This text of 222 F. 61 (Steiner, Lobman & Frank v. T. S. Faulk & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
After hearing the arguments of counsel representing the respective parties, the court stated that it did not think that the views of-the attorneys' representing the petitioning creditors and those of the court as to the petition were far apart, and directed that the case proceed to a trial and that a jury be impaneled. In the statement to the jury which was impaneled of the issues submitted to them, attorneys for the petitioning creditors stated the facts expected to be proved as showing an estoppel against the alleged bankrupt substantially as those facts were stated in the petition above mentioned, and in reply to this statement attorneys for the alleged bankrupt denied the existence of the facts so stated. Evidence was adduced on the issue thus made. In reference to that issue the court said in its charge to the jury:
“It is contended on behalf of the petitioning creditors that T. g. Faulk & Co. consented or agreed that Mr. Frank should put them, into bankruptcy. Now, under that consideration, I invite your attention to the law. Under the law it is not competent for one partner, without the knowledge or consent of the other partners, if there be several, one or more, to consent or agree that the commercial firm shall be put into bankruptcy, or acquiesce in the putting of the firm into bankruptcy, and any such agreement or acquiescence does not bind the commercial firm, or prevent it from denying the existence of any act of bankruptcy, or of its insolvency.”
An exception to this instruction was duly reserved by the petitioning creditors. The jury could not, without disobeying this instruction, have found in favor of the petitioning creditors on the estoppel issue, as the only evidence adduced which had a tendency to prove that the petitioning creditors, in filing the involuntary petition in bankruptcy, acted at the instance or request of any one other than themselves, was that tending to prove that they instituted the proceeding at the instance and request of T. S. Faulk, one of the members of the firm of T. S. Faulk & Co. Whether it was the purpose of the court, in permitting the evidence on the issue to be adduced before the jury, to obtain a verdict which was to be conclusive, or one that was to be merely for the aid of the court in itself finally passing on the issue, so raised, the instruction may be regarded as a ruling to the effect that the evidence adduced did not support the asserted claim to an estoppel.
[63]*63We are not of opinion that the court was in error in so ruling. The evidence tending to prove that the conduct of the business of the firm was left entirely with T. S. Faulk, and that the other partner had nothing to do with the management of the business, had no tendency to prove that T. S. Faulk was authorized to bind the partnership by his consent that it be adjudged bankrupt. The power which that evidence tended to prove was vested in T. S. Faulk was that of carrying on the firm business without consulting his associate, and did not include that of terminating the partnership by consenting that it be adjudged a bankrupt. Parker v. Brown, 85 Fed. 595, 29 C. C. A. 357; Osborne v. Barge (C. C.) 29 Fed. 725; In re Carleton (D. C.) 115 Fed. 246; In re Murray (D. C.) 96 Fed. 600; 30 Cyc. 520; Bates on Partnership, § 338. The conclusion is that there was an absence of evidence to support the averment of the estoppel petition to the effect that T. S. Faulk was authorized to bind the partnership by a request that a petition to have it adjudged a bankrupt be filed. The ruling in the'ease of Paul v. Cullum, 132 U. S. 539, 10 Sup, Ct. 151, 33 L. Ed. 430, is not opposed to this conclusion. In that case the court held that a special power of attorney was broad enough in its terms to confer on one partner the power to make in behalf of the firm an assignment for the benefit of creditors.
It is not necessary to determine whether the action of the court with reference to the estoppel claim could properly be sustained upon a ground other than the one above mentioned. We are not of opinion that there was any reversible error in any ruling of which complaint is made.
The judgment of the District Court is affirmed, and the petition to superintend and revise the same proceedings is denied.
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222 F. 61, 137 C.C.A. 599, 1915 U.S. App. LEXIS 1426, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steiner-lobman-frank-v-t-s-faulk-co-ca5-1915.