Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion

. - OFFICE OF THE ATTORNFX GLNERAL OEiiALDC. MANN Attorney General Honorable L, R. Thompson County Auditor Taylor County Abllens, Texas Dear Sir3 Opinion No. O-2535 Ret Can the described deliveries be made by the truok without heving It registered In Texas? :!;e have received your recent request for the opinion of this Department upon the above stated question. For fsctuel background of your request, we quote from your letter as followrl "A men living In Texhs end his brother living In Arizona are operating under a trade name In Arizona, and are delivering fruit Into Texhs by truck whioh Is registered under en Arisone license. "The oucstion arises: "C&n such deliveries be made by this truck without having it registered in Texas? "The Arizona concern IQ a partnership, wholesale dealers In fruit end vegatables. "The truck does not make scheduled trips to Texas, but makes from one to four trips per month dslivsrlng fruit end vegetables to their diatrl- buting warehouse In Texas, from khlch place It is redistributed by Texas registered truoka taoother pointa." The registrntlon and licensing laws respectins motor vehiolss are shown by the various sections of Article bh75e, Vernon's Civil Jtetutes. Sections 6, ba, 7 end 8 heve'specifia epplicetlon to commerolel motor vehicles, truok-trnotors and trailers or semi-trailers. Examination of these sections reveals no exception under which the owne!'or operator of e truck line Is permitted to operate e truck, truok-treotor or trailer witrioutfirst licensing same under theprovisions of the laws of Texas relating thereto. Article 667sa-2 provides, Inpert: "Every owner of e motor vehicle, trailer or sesi-trailer used or to be used upon the public highways of this state, and er;chchauffeur, shall apply each year to the Stete Highway Department through the aounty tax collector of the oounty in whiah he resldss for the registration of each such vehlole oainedor controlled by him, . . .v Honorable L. R. Thompson, Page 2, O-2535 Section (L) of said Article bb75e-l-defines the term 'owner" PI)followsr '(L) (Owner 1 means any person who holds the legal title of a vehicle or who has the legelrlght of possession tnereof, or the legal right of oontrol of said vehicle," We are assuming that the partners In the instant case have a community of interest as common owners of the property enge-jedIn the business. The first question w+ioh arises Is whether or not the vehicle In question Is exoepted from the general registration laws by Article 827b of the Penal Code, which deals with non-resident owners of motor vehioles. Under said Article 827b temporary registration certificates may be obtained for out of state vehicles by non-resident owners, A "non-resident" Is defined in Section 1 of said Article 827b as follows: "'Non-resident' means every resident of e state or country other then the State of Texas, whose sojourn In this State, or WIOOSSoccupation, or place of abode, or business In thin State, if any, covers a total period of not more than one hundred earltwenty-five days in the calendar year." The courts of this State do not recognize a partnershlp aa a legal entity. The Co.mmlsslonof A.c,peals of Texas, In thee ase of Martin vs. fiemphill, 237 6.U. 5.50,speeklng through Justice Powell stated; " . . . A partnership, at comrOonlaw, 1s not e legal entity, but only '8 eontrsatuel status." The commission of Appeals of Texas held that tha common law rule applied in Texas In the aase of Allison vs. Campbell, 1 S.W. (26) 866. The court stated es follows~ II . A partnership at oomnon law 1s not e legal entity but e contractual SC&S. Martin vs. Bemphill (Tex. Corn.App.) 237 Y. b. 550, 20 A.L.R. 984; Marshall V. Bennett, 214 Ky. 328, 283 S. vi. 1151 Schumaker on Partnerships (2d. Ed.) p. 2. Texeo has no statute regulating general partnerships, in the absence of whioh the rules of common law govern the oourts In dealing with the question of general partnerslips." TheFort Xorth Court of Civil Appeals In the case of Beggs v. Brooker, 79 9.3. (26) 6/+2,steted as followsr "A partnersnip has no legal entity. It exists only as Its individual membe's exist." The Federal District Court for the 7th District of Ohio In the case of E. 1. Depont De Nemours Powder Co. v. Jones Bras., 200 Fed. Rep. 638, stated es follows: "Residence cannot be predicated of a partnership.' . fionorable L. R. Thompson, Pam 3. O-2535 The Supreme Court of Ohio in the %aae of Byera va. schlupe, 38 Ii.E. 117, etsted aa follows: “A partnerkhlp is not, in our judgment, a lc~,alertltp, having, aa such, a domicile or resldenoe separate and dlatlnot from that of the lndlvfcuals who constitute It." The above holding of the Ohio court8 Is the law in this atate, because said case8 are predloated upon the idea that a partnership is not a aeparete la-al entity aside and dletlnct from the Individual partners. Therefore, the residenoe of a partnership must be oonsldared the same aa that of the individuals oomprlslng the partnership. It follows that the >artnershIp in question, by vfrtue of one of Its mem'terebeing a resident of this btate, Is a domeatlo gartnershlp and as such Is a resident of the Stete of Texas. The fsot that one of the partnera resides In Arizona, an3 though the Arizona Laws may construe this partnership a resident of that state, the partnership, nevertheless, Is a resldsnt of Texsa under the Motor Vohlcle Reglstratlon Law. Under the foregoing authoritfes, you are reapeotfully advised that it 1s the opinion of thlr Department that Article 827b of the Yenal Code would have no a?plIcatIon to the vehicle in question and that the vehicle should be registered In Texas under our general reglatered In Texas under our general registration laws. Truetlng that this aatlsfaotorily disposes of y'3urinquiry, we remain Yours very truly ATTORIUKYOtlWiAL OF TlXAS a/ D. Burla iravIae .BY D, Burle DavIsr Aaalatant DBDzBIE/og APYROVE~ ;NLY 29, 1440 Olenn R. Lsrlr AT'I'ORhTEY CILNZRAL3F TEXAS Approved Opinion- Committee By BS3, Chairman