White v. Moore

43 S.E.2d 299, 130 W. Va. 390, 1947 W. Va. LEXIS 53
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 24, 1947
Docket9851
StatusPublished

This text of 43 S.E.2d 299 (White v. Moore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
White v. Moore, 43 S.E.2d 299, 130 W. Va. 390, 1947 W. Va. LEXIS 53 (W. Va. 1947).

Opinion

Haymond, Judge:

This action was instituted before a justice of the peace of Fayette County, West Virginia, by the plaintiff, Everett White, to recover from the defendant, Robert H. Moore, one half of an alleged partnership debt of $229.44 which the plaintiff contends accrued while he and the defendant were partners and which the plaintiff, after the dissolution of the partnership, paid to the Treasurer of the United States in settlement of a claim filed by the Office of Price Administration for overcharges received by the partnership in that amount from sales of beer. From a judgment for $114.72 and costs in favor of the plaintiff the defendant obtained an appeal to the Circuit Court of Fayette County.

The trial of the case in that court resulted in a directed verdict for the plaintiff in the same amount. Upon that verdict the circuit court entered the judgment of which the defendant complains in this Court.

The evidence with respect to the material facts is not conflicting, and the questions which arise upon this writ of error are questions of law.

*392 The plaintiff and the defendant were general partners during the period October, 1943, to May 17, 1945, and as such operated a restaurant known as the Gauley Tavern at Gauley Bridge in Fayette County. In connection with this business they sold various kinds of beer in bottles. Prior to the formation of the partnership, and during the month of April, 1943, the defendant and a man named Biern had operated the same business by the name of Gauley Tavern, as partners, until the plaintiff purchased Biern’s interest in October, 1943. By a regulation of the Office of Price Administration, the maximum price at which beer could be sold in various types of bottles at the Gauley Tavern during the period of the partnership between the plaintiff and the defendant, which existed from October, 1943, to May 17, 1945, when the defendant disposed of his interest, was the price which had been charged between April 4 and April 10, 1943, for each type of bottled beer. During this period the price of beer at the Gauley Tavern was thirteen cents for a small standard bottle, eighteen cents for a small premium bottle, thirty-two cents for a standard quart bottle, and forty-two cents for a premium quart bottle.

From the time the plaintiff purchased the interest of Biern and became a partner with the defendant in October, 1943, until May 17, 1945, when the defendant sold his interest and ceased to be a partner, the price charged by them for beer sold at the Gauley Tavern was fifteen cents for a small standard bottle and twenty cents for a small premium bottle, or two cents for each bottle in excess of the maximum price allowed by the regulation. The price charged for the beer in a standard quart bottle was thirty-five cents and in a premium quart bottle was forty-five cents, or three cents for each such bottle of beer above the authorized price. Those prices were obtained by the plaintiff and the defendant because of a misunderstanding of the regulation and apparently in the belief that they were permitted by it. With the knowledge and the consent of the defendant, the plaintiff, on two or three occasions, discussed the matter with the representative of *393 the local price and rationing board of the Office of Price Administration in Fayette County for the purpose of ascertaining and determining the authorized price of the different types of bottled beer sold by the plaintiff and the defendant at the Gauley Tavern.

No definite understanding, however, was reached during the negotiations. Several days after the defendant sold his interest in the partnership the local board called upon the plaintiff for a report or an audit of the sales of beer made by the partnership during the period July 1, 1944, to April 15, 1945, including the number and the kinds of bottles and the price received for each bottle of beer. The plaintiff informed the defendant of this action of the board. The defendant stated that he had no audit to make, that he had sold his interest in the business, and that he did not consider that he had violated any law or that he owed anything in connection with the sales of beer by the partnership. The plaintiff then prepared the report from the partnership records and submitted it to the board.

On July 27, 1945, the plaintiff received a written notice from the local price panel acting for the Office of Price Administration, addressed to White and Moore, that the overcharges computed from the audit of sales' of beer from July 1, 1944, to April 15, 1945, amounted to $229.44 and that a certified check or a money order payable- to the Treasurer of the United States in that sum, should be mailed to it on or before August 15, 1945. After receipt of the notice the plaintiff conferred with the defendant, who refused to pay any part of the charge. On July 30, 1945, the plaintiff, having been informed that unless the claim was paid action for three times the amount would be instituted, made payment of the account with his own funds and obtained a- receipt from the local board. He seeks to recover one half of this payment of $229.44 from the defendant in this action.

Upon the trial of the 'case in the circuit court the plaintiff testified to the foregoing facts in connection with the claim of the Office of Price Administration for the over *394 charges made by the partnership during the period July 1, 1944, to April 15, 1945, and the manner in which he satisfied the account. The authorized prices for the kinds of bottled beer sold during that period and the prices charged for them by the partnership were established by the testimony of other witnesses. Those facts' were not denied by the defendant, who testified as a witness in his own behalf. He also admitted that the prices charged by him and the plaintiff were fifteen cents and twenty cents instead of thirteen cents and eighteen cents for the bottled beer sold at the Gauley Tavern during practically all of the period July 1, 1944, to April 15, 1945. His contention is that the prices of fifteen cents and twenty cents per bottle were permitted by the regulation. That contention, however, is not sustained by the evidence.

Two principal errors are assigned by the defendant to reverse the judgment of the trial court.

The first assignment is that the claim of the Office of Price Administration, an agency of the Federal Government acting in its behalf, was not a partnership debt. Though the defendant does not deny the clearly established fact that the transactions out of which the overcharges arose occurred during the existence of the partnership or his knowledge of or participation in them as a partner of the plaintiff, he insists that the postponement of the determination and the assessment of the amount until after May 17, 1945, when he disposed of his interest, removed the transaction from the category of partnership obligations. In short, he contends that the obligation, if valid, is the debt of the plaintiff or of the new partnership between the plaintiff and the purchaser of the interest formerly owned by the defendant and not the debt of the partnership which formerly existed between him and the plaintiff, and that he is not liable for any part of it. This position is not well founded in fact or in law.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
43 S.E.2d 299, 130 W. Va. 390, 1947 W. Va. LEXIS 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-moore-wva-1947.