Whitehead v. Bank of Pittsburgh

2 Watts & Serg. 172
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 15, 1841
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 2 Watts & Serg. 172 (Whitehead v. Bank of Pittsburgh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Whitehead v. Bank of Pittsburgh, 2 Watts & Serg. 172 (Pa. 1841).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Huston, J.

The Pittsburgh Bank was the plaintiff, and sued upon the following note.

“ Pittsburgh, 11 th May 1839.
$600.
“ Sixty days after date we promise to pay to the order of R. C. Greer, six hundred dollars, without defalcation, for value received.
“ Whitehead, Ihmsens & Philips.
Endorsed,
“ R. C. Greer,
Whitehead, Sproul & Co.”

1. It was admitted that the above note was written by Thomas T. Whitehead, formerly of the firm of Whitehead, Ihmsens & Philips.

2. It was admitted that prior to the date of the note there had been a firm of Whitehead, Ihmsens and Philips, composed of the defendants in this suit.

[174]*1743. It was admitted that the endorsement Whitehead, Sproul & Co., and the signature Whitehead, Ihmsens & Philips, were written by Thomas T. Whitehead.

The defence was, that on the 13th December, before the date of the note, the firm of Whitehead, Ihmsens & Philips was dissolved, and that this was known to the cashier, and at least some of the directors of the bank. There was a good deal of testimony, and some exception to evidence, but as the court intimated that the jury should take it there was actual notice, and the cause was argued on other grounds, I omit this part of the case.

Notice of the dissolution was published 13th December 1838, in the “Advocate,” a daily paper in Pittsburgh, taken at the bank, and other evidence of their knowledge. The notice was as follows :

“ Notice. — The partnership heretofore existing between the subscribers in the manufacturing of flint and black glass, was dissolved on the 16th of October, by limitation, and the retiring of William Philips. The business will be closed by the remaining partners, for which purpose the name of the firm will be continued”
“December 13 th 1838.
Signed, “ Thomas T. Whitehead,
Christian Ihmsen,
Charles Ihmsen,
William Philips.”

The cause depended much in the Common Pleas, and was argued here on the effect of the last part of this notice of dissolution, It was contended for the defendant, Christian Ihmsen, who alone' resisted the plaintiff’s recovery, that the closing clause, “ for which purpose the name of the firm is continued,” had no operation, and gave no authority, more than the remaining partners would have had, if those words had not been inserted. It will be proper, however, to notice some occurrences posterior to 13th December 1838.

Henry Sproul at some time came into the firm, either at the time or after Mr Philips retired. On 1st January 1839, Christian Ihmsen sold his interest in the concern to Thomas T. Whitehead and Henry Sproul. The articles of sale are long and specific. The purchasers were to give their notes or bonds for above $18,000. This seems to be increased or diminished as a final settlement of the affairs of the late firm of Whitehead, Ihmsens & Philips should turn out. The new firm of Whitehead, Sproul & Co. to pay all debts, including those to Mr Philips for his share.

The clause relied on by both parties followed.

“ It is agreed by the parties to these presents, that the name of the firm, Whitehead, Ihmsens & Philips, is to be used for the renewal of any notes given in bank by the late firm of Whitehead, [175]*175Ihmsens and Philips. And it is also understood that Frederick Lorentz will continue his endorsements on the notes of Whitehead, Ihmsens & Philips, to the amount that he is now on, subject to the reductions required by the banks, and that he will endorse drafts drawn by Whitehead, Sproul & Co. in his favour, to meet any reductions in the notes aforesaid of Whitehead, Ihmsens & Philips; and that the agreement of said Lorentz will be procured so to do, before the taking effect of these premises.”

Christian Ihmsen left the city without speaking to Lorentz, and Lorentz as I understand it, refused to endorse ever after.

It has been strongly contended, that by the clause of the agreement last cited, Whitehead and Sproul (for they and Christian Ihmsen are the only parties to this agreement) are expressly limited in the use of the name of Whitehead, Ihmsens and Philips, to the renewal of notes given by that firm, and in some bank or banks. Admit that this last agreement would limit the use of this name to that purpose alone. The agreement assumes that the remaining partners, of whom Christian Ihmsen until this last agreement was one, had power to use the name of the old firm. How did they obtain that power ? By agreement when Mr Philips retired. What was the evidence that they had such authority ? The published terms of the dissolution. That publication gave the authority in more general terms. “ The business will be closed by the remaining partners, for which purpose the name of the firm will be continued.” Now Mr Philips thought, and Charles Ihmsen thought, and they think yet, as it seems, that the remaining partners had a right to use the name of the old firm for the purpose of closing the concern. The business of a court and jury is to ascertain the meaning and intention of the parties in making an agreement, and to carry that into effect, if it is consistent with law. I know of no better mode of ascertaining this meaning, than is shown if all parties acted on a particular meaning. Some observations from respectable sources, where the parties acted on a mistake of the quantity of estate given by certain words, which words, in law, have acquired a fixed and certain meaning, are not, in my opinion, applicable to agreements relating to the ordinary business of life, where no words of legal technical force are used. Christian Ihmsen himself understood that the remaining partners had power to use the name of the old firm, or it was absurd to make any agreement about the use of it. His counsel says, by this contract he limited Whitehead and Sproul in the use of it; but what did the bank know of this agreement of the 1st of January 1839? There was evidence sufficient to justify the court in, to a degree, assuming that the bank’s officers knew of the dissolution, and saw and read the advertisement; but nothing to induce even a suspicion that any one of them ever saw the agreement of sale of Ihmsen to Whitehead and Sproul. [176]*176The bank, then, had a right to understand the notice of dissolution as its words purport, and as the parties to it understood it. No new arrangement between the remaining partners, of which the bank had no knowledge, could affect it. I have looked in vain for any evidence that any officer of the bank ever saw this agreement of the 1st of January 1839, or had any notice that it in any way affected the terms of the dissolution of the first partnership.

It was, however, said, and many authorities cited to prove, that after the dissolution of a partnership, no one of the partners can use the partnership name so as to affect the other partners. This, as a general rule was not denied. I do not contest it.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Watts & Serg. 172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitehead-v-bank-of-pittsburgh-pa-1841.