It is undisputed that the goods, for the price of which this action was brought, were sold to the defendant Powers alone. There is no claim, or pretense that any partnership existed between the two defendants before October 15, 1885. The defendant Stone has not been held liable in this action as an original purchaser of the goods, but he was so held on the grounds that in October, 1885, he became a partner of Powers, and that the firm of Powers & Stone assumed the indebtedness of Powers for goods theretofore purchased, including the claim of the plaintiffs.
The facts upon which this' recovery was obtained are briefly as follows: About October 15, 1885, Stone went into the store of Powers, and assisted in carrying on the business, in contemplation of forming a copartnership with Powers at some future time, if the business suited him. Powers requested Stone to allow the use of his name as a partner, because, as he said, if his customers knew there *619was to be a change in the business, they would be more apt to pay up their old accounts, and thus collections would be facilitated. Stone consented, and thereafter goods were ordered of the plaintiffs and others, in the name of Powers & Stone. No change was made in the manner of keeping the books of the concern, except that a clerk wrote the firm, name over one page in the journal, and the same name, or initials P. & S., were written by him in a few places in the ledger.
It is undisputed that Stone allowed himself to be held out as a partner of Powers, and thus made himself liable for any debts contracted in the name of Powers & Stone on the faith that there was such a firm. But this does not establish the liability of Stone in this action. The demand here in suit was unmistakably the debt of Powers alone. Stone can only be held liable herein upon proof of an express promise by him, founded upon a sufficient consideration, to pay the debt of Powers, or upon proof that he had actually entered into copartnership with Powers, and that the new firm had agreed to pay the antecedent debts of Powers. There is no testimony whatever tending to show that Stone ever made any such express agreement to become liable for Powers’ debts. So, if he be held at all, it must be upon the ground last above stated, to wit, that a partnership was formed which assumed to pay such indebtedness. A mere holding out of Stone as a partner is not sufficient to raise such liability. There must be a partnership in fact. The circuit judge so instructed the jury.
"We have looked through the testimony in the case (and there is much of it) with great care, and we fail to find any satisfactory proof that Powers and Stone ever became copartners at all. The entry of the firm name or firm initials upon the books by the clerk, as above stated, was made without the direction or knowledge of either partner, so far as the record shows, and is a circumstance of very trifling *620significance. Both defendants deny that any such copart-nership was formed, and the case is entirely barren of any of the usual indicia of a change in the business of Powers. No inventory was taken; no terms of copartnership were agreed upon; no money was paid into the concern, or promised to be paid in, by Stone; but he was simply a clerk in Powers’ store, had little or nothing to do with the books, and exercised no authority or control over the business. The only testimony tending to charge him as a partner was that above stated as constituting a holding him out as a partner, and the further circumstance that certain commercial travelers testified that Powers substantially admitted to them that he and Stone had entered into copartnership, and the firm had assumed his outstanding debts. Both the defendants deny having made any such admission. Indeed, there is no testimony worthy of consideration that Stone ever made any such statement. The fact that the cash-book of the concern shows that the current receipts of the business were constantly applied in the payment of Powers’ debts, contracted before Stone went into the store, is greatly relied upon by plaintiffs’ counsel to show an assumption of those debts by the alleged new firm. We think the fact is more significant as tending to show that the business had not been interrupted by the introduction of a new partner.
In short, the testimony, and all the reasonable probabilities of the case, are so overwhelmingly against the claim that any such partnership was formed, that the testimony in support of such claim is quite insufficient to sustain the verdict. We are clearly of the opinion that the verdict is unjust, and unsupported by the testimony, and that it should not be allowed to stand. Had the partnership been established, the difficulties in the way of supporting a finding that the firm assumed the debts of Powers are almost as insuperable.
The circuit court ought to have granted a new trial, for *621the reason that the verdict is against the evidence. The judgment of the circuit court must be reversed as to the appellant, and the cause will be remanded, with directions to that court to award a new trial as to him.
By the Court.— Ordered accordingly.