Ward v. Motter

2 Va. 536
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedDecember 15, 1843
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Va. 536 (Ward v. Motter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ward v. Motter, 2 Va. 536 (Va. 1843).

Opinions

Baldwin, J.

The liability of a dormant partner depends not upon the terms, or the form, or the dignity of the contract between the creditor and the ostensible partner, but upon the relation which the dormant partner bears to the subject of and the parties to the contract. The creditor, ignorant of the existence of the dormant partner, has of course no transaction whatever with him, but deals exclusively with the ostensible partner, looks to his credit and responsibility alone, and never speculates upon the mere possibility of a dormant partner who may thereafter be accidentally discovered. The law subjects the dormant partner upon considerations of justice and policy. It is just that he who participates in the benefits should also be responsible for the engagements of the concern; and it would lead to much inconvenience and fraud, if the demands of creditors, growing out of the partnership business, should be affected by the secrecy of the connexion between the partners. This liability of the dormant partner, by operation of law, cannot be frustrated by any arrangements between the creditor and the ostensible partner; for such, in the nature of things, cannot be the intent of the creditor; and though it may be and usually is the intention of the ostensible as well as the dormant partner, that very intention it is the object of the law to overrule and defeat. It follows that all such arrangements, of whatever nature, whether by the separate security of the ostensible partner, or otherwise, are merely collateral to that joint undertaking which the law forces upon the members of the firm; an undertaking based upon the consideration which has enured to the benefit of the partnership, and governed by a rule broader than the stipulations of contracts, “ qui sentit commodum sentire debet et onus.”

[544]*544The remedy, however, against the dormant partner must conform to his joint responsibility, and he cannot be sued alone, unless the objection be waived by his failure to plead it in abatement. The creditor may bring his action against the dormant and ostensible partners upon their joint implied promise, raised by the law out of the joint consideration; as where goods are sold or money advanced to the partnership, though without the creditor’s knowledge of its existence at the time of his thus dealing with the ostensible partner. Or, where there is an express contract, the terms of which embrace the dormant partner, though unintentionally, as if there be several ostensible partners and also a dormant partner, and a security be given by the partnership, for example a promissory note payable by A. B. & co. or A. B., C. D. & co. the creditor may join the dormant partner in an action thereupon, inasmuch as he falls within the description of the firm. But if the terms of the security do not embrace the dormant partner, as if it be made payable by A. B. or by A. B. and C. D. the ostensible partner or partners, the dormant partner cannot be joined in an action thereupon.

The liability of the dormant partner, moreover, is not absolute, but dependant upon the election of the creditor; and that election must be made in due time, and by a proper course of proceeding. In Hoare v. Dawes, 1 Doug. 371. it was said by lord Mansfield, that a dormant partner is liable when discovered. But I do not understand him to mean whenever discovered, or whatever may have been the proceedings against the ostensible partner; but only that though the dealing has been with the ostensible partner alone, yet the dormant partner may be subjected, if discovered. The creditor must however take care that he do not, by proceeding upon the joint contract, implied or express, against the ostensible partner alone, thereby lose his remedy against the dormant partner. If he brings his action upon the [545]*545implied promise, that being joint, he must not omit the dormant partner; for if he proceeds to judgment against the ostensible partner alone, he cannot afterwards maintain an action against the dormant partner, who may meet a separate suit by a plea in abatement, and a joint suit by shewing that the promise is no longer joint, it having been dissevered by the proceeding against his codefendant, as to whom transit in rent judicatam. So if the creditor brings his action upon a joint express promise, as in the case above supposed of a note payable by A. B. & co. or A. B., C. D. & co. the like result will follow from a separate judgment against the ostensible partners : another action cannot be subsequently maintained upon such joint promise. And in neither case will the objection in the subsequent action be answered by saying, that at the time of the separate judgment the dormant partner had not been discovered; for whether that has been the fault or the misfortune of the creditor, the recovery already had against the ostensible partner or partners presents an insurmountable obstacle; inasmuch as the law does not tolerate a second judgment against the same person upon the same cause of action. But where the express promise excludes the dormant partner, as in the case of a note given by the ostensible partner alone, a recovery thereupon against the latter presents no difficulty in the way of a subsequent action against him and the dormant partner, upon their joint implied promise; for a judgment upon a collateral security is no bar to a suit upon the original cause of action. Drake v. Mitchell, 3 East 251.

The case before us is unembarrassed by any separate proceedings on the part of the creditor against the ostensible partner. It is simply the case, as presented by the special verdict, of a sale of goods to the ostensible partner for the use and benefit of the partnership business, and a separate security taken from the ostensible partner therefor, without any knowledge at the [546]*546time on the part of the creditor that the dormant partner was a member of the concern. No recovery has been had nor action brought upon the separate security °*" ostensible partner, who has died ; but the creditor, on discovering the dormant partner, has brought this action against him as the surviving member of the firm, upon the joint promise implied by law.

If the separate security given in this case by the ostensible partner were by simple contract, it is quite clear that the dormant partner would not be thereby exonerated. It is well settled that one simple contract, for the same consideration, does not extinguish another. If therefore a promissory note or bill of exchange be given for goods sold or money loaned, it does not bar the creditor’s right of action founded upon the consideration; unless, from the negotiable character of the instrument, and the creditor’s conduct or laches in relation thereto, the debtor is, in contemplation of law, subjected to the hazard of loss. Chitty on Bills p. 433. And if such note or bill be a separate security, it is immaterial, as to the effect of the instrument-merely, whether it be given for a joint or a separate debt. It may be evidence that the debt was in its origin separate, or that the debt originally joint has been converted by a subsequent agreement into a separate debt; but if the fact be otherwise, if the debt was originally joint and has not been so converted into a separate debt, the separate security is merely collateral to the joint responsibility.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Va. 536, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ward-v-motter-va-1843.