Winship v. the Bank of the United States

30 U.S. 529, 8 L. Ed. 216, 5 Pet. 529, 1831 U.S. LEXIS 372
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 26, 1831
StatusPublished
Cited by73 cases

This text of 30 U.S. 529 (Winship v. the Bank of the United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Winship v. the Bank of the United States, 30 U.S. 529, 8 L. Ed. 216, 5 Pet. 529, 1831 U.S. LEXIS 372 (1831).

Opinions

Marshall, Ch. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court. — This was an action brought in the court for the first circuit and district for Massachusetts, against John Winship, Amos Binney and John Binney, merchants and partners, trading under the name and firm of John Winship, as indorser of several promissory notes, made by Samuel Jacques, jr. At the trial, the maker was called by the plaintiffs, and sworn. He was objected to by the defendants, as an interested witness, an instrument being produced purporting to be a release in the name of John Winship of all liability of the maker on the said notes. The operation of the said instrument, as a release of the notes in suit, was controverted by the plaintiffs. It is unnecessary to state the instrument, or to discuss the question arising on it, or on the competency of the witness ; because the court is divided on the effect of the instrument and on the competency of .the witness.

The witness testified, that he knew from general reputation that the defendant, John Winship, was concerned with the other defendants, Amos and John Binney, in the soap and candle business ; that Winship avowed the partnership ; that he had dealings with Winship, soon after its commencement, and supplied him with rosin, for which he sometimes gave a note, signed John Winship, which the witness always took on the credit of the Binneys. Winship and the witness were in the habit of lending their names to each other, and Winship always represented that the notes made or indorsed by the witness for his accommodation were for the use of the firm. Several other witnesses were examined on the part of the plaintiff to [355]*355prove the partnership, whose testimony was rendered unimportant by the production of the articles themselves. The defendants exhibited them, and they are in the following words :

“The memorandum of an agreement made this twenty-fifth day of September 1817, between Amos Binney and John Binney, of Boston, county of Suffolk, and John Winship, of ^Charlestown, county of Middlesex, all in the commonwealth of Massachusetts, for the manufacture of *- soap and candles, witnesseth : That the said Amos and John Binney agree to furnish for the above purpose, the sum or capital stock of $10,000, at such times as maybe wanted, to purchase stock or materials for carrying on the aforesaid manufacture ; and the said John Winship agrees on his part to conduct and superintend the manufactory, and to pay his whole and undivided attention to the business ; to manufacture, or cause to be manufactured, every article, in the best possible manner, and to use his utmost skill and exertions to promote the interest of the establishment, under the name and firm of John Winship, and without any charge for his personal labors ; and to keep a fair and regular set of books and accounts, open and subject at all times to the inspection of the parties interested in the concern, and annually, on the first day of October of each year, to make and exhibit a statement of the state of the business, the amount of purchases and sales, and the profits, if any, of the business, that have been made ; the expenses of conducting the business, and the profits, to be divided in the following manner : to say, from the profits is to be paid interest for the capital stock of $10,000, at the rate of six per centum per annum, all expenses of rent, labor, transportation, fuel and utensils, that it maybe necessary to purchase or have, and the remainder of the profits, if any, to be equally divided between the said Winship and Binneys, one-half thereof to the said John Winship, and the other half to A. and J. Binney; and in case no profit should be made, but a loss, then the loss is to be borne and sustained, one-half by the said A. and J. Binney, and the other half by the said John Winship. The agreement to continue in force for two years from the first day of October next ensuing, and then for a further term, provided all parties agree thereto. And to the true and faithful performance of the foregoing conditions, each party bind themselves to the other in the penal sum of $10,000.”

On the back of which were receipts signed by said W inship, acknowledging that he had received of Amos Binney $1000, on the 6th of September 1817, and *$4000, on the 9th of October 1817 ; and on the 27th of December 1827, he had in his hands $10,000, as said Amos’s propor- *- tion of the capital; and that he had received of John Binney $2500, on the 1st of October 1817, and $500, on the 3d of November 1817, and $500, on the 17th of November 1817, and $1500, on the 13th of June 1820, and on the 2d of June 1821, he had in his hands $10,000, as said John’s proportion of the capital stock.

They also gave in evidence a bond given by said Winship to said Amos, on the 25th of September 1817, in the penal sum of $10,000, with the condition following : “ The conditions of this obligation are such, that whereas, the above-bounden John Winship has this day made an agreement with Amos Binney and John Binney, both of Boston aforesaid, for the purpose of carrying on a manufactory of soap and candles on joint [356]*356account of the parties aforesaid ; and whereas, the said A. Binney hath engaged to indorse the notes given by the said John Winship, for the purchase of stock and raw materials for manufacturing, when necessary to purchase on a credit, and in consideration of which the said John Winship hath engaged not to indorse the notes, paper, or become in any manner responsible or security for any person or persons other than the said Amos Binney, for the term of two years from the first day of October 1817. Now, therefore, if the said John Winship shall faithfully observe the conditions, and wholly abstain fi-om becoming the surety or indorser of any person to any amount other than the same Amos Binney for the aforesaid term of two years from the first day of October 1817, then this obligation to be void and of no effect; otherwise, to remain in full force and virtue.”

The defendants also produced witnesses whose testimony furnished some foundation for the presumption, that the money arising from the notes, on which the suits were brought, was not applied by Winship to the purposes of the firm. Other testimony led to the belief, that a part, if not the whole of the money was so applied. All the notes in suit were discounted by and applied to the credit of John Winship.

*The testimony being closed, the counsel for the defendant insisted, 1st. “ That the said copartnership between them was, in contemplation of law, a secret copartnership, and did not authorize the giving of credit to any other name than that of the said Winship but to this the counsel for the plaintiffs did then and there insist before the said court, that this was an open or avowed, and not a secret copartnership. And the presiding justice of the said court did state his opinion to the jury on this point, as follows : “ That according to his understanding of the common meaning of ‘ secret partnership,’ those were deemed secret, where the existence of certain persons as partners was not avowed or made known to the public, by any of the partners.

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Bluebook (online)
30 U.S. 529, 8 L. Ed. 216, 5 Pet. 529, 1831 U.S. LEXIS 372, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/winship-v-the-bank-of-the-united-states-scotus-1831.