McCann v. R. L. McDonald & Co.

Maxwell, J.

In the year 1871 the defendants in error brought an action against the plaintiff herein, in the district court of Otoe county, to recover the'sum of $1,516.80. The petition was afterwards amended, and the action brought against the plaintiff herein and one W. W. Smith, as surviving partners of the firm of O. S. Rider and Company. No service was had upon Smith. The plaintiff in error answered the petition, denying all the facts therein stated.

In 1876 the case was tried to a jury, and a verdict rendered against the plaintiff in error for the full amount claimed in the petition. The cause is brought into this court by petition in error.

The plaintiff insists that the proof fails to show that McCann and Smith were surviving partners of O. S. Rider and Company. And therefore the proof that McCann was a partner does not sustain the allegations of the petition. It is a sufficient answer to this objection to say, that there is proof tending to show that McCann was a partner in the firm of O. S. Rider and Co., and therefore liable for the payment of the partnership debts. McCann claims that the partnership was dissolved on the first day of June, 1871, and that, at that time, he ceased to be a member of the firm. The sole question, therefore, for the consideration' of the court is, does the testimony show that McCann was in fact a member of the firm of O. S. Rider and Co. after the first day of June, 1871? If it does, the judgment must be affirmed. If not, the judgment must be reversed.

McCann testifies that the partnership ceased on the *308first day of June, 1871, he having on that day sold his interest therein to his partner, O. S. Rider, for the sum of $5,000, and that he received a note therefor, signed O., S. Rider and Co., which note he endorsed and had discounted at the Nebraska City National Bank. And that the note of O. S. Rider and Co., for $5,000, held by the bank, was received by him from Rider on the sale of his interest in the firm, and was not given by the firm while he was a member thereof.

W. W. Bell, who was vice-president of the Nebraska City National Bank in the year 1871, testifies that the plaintiff was at that time president of the bank, and that between the first day of August, 1871, and the first day of January, 1872, he (the plaintiff in error) told him that he was a member of the .firm of O. S. Rider and Co. And that after August 1st, 1871, the bank discounted two notes for O. S. Rider and Co., one for $5,000 and one for $925, the plaintiff in error signing O. S. Rider & Co.’s name to the notes and presenting them himself for discount. He also testifies that after August 1st, 1871, the plaintiff in error told him that he had $5,000 in the firm of O. S. Rider and Co., and also about January or February, 1872, plaintiff in error told him that O. S. Rider and Co. owed him (plaintiff) $1,000 for his share of the profits for the year’s business.

Mary- H. Rider testifies that she was the wife of O. S. Rider; that she was in the store of O. S. Rider & Co. from 1867 to 1872, and saw the books and helped tend the store, and that she had no knowledge of the dissolution of the firm in 1871.

J. W. Latham testifies that in 1872 the plaintiff in error told him that ,he had a (business) house in Shenandoah, Iowa, and that witness might perhaps make some arrangements with them (to sell plows); he did not know how they were stocked up.

George L. Worley, cashier of the Nebraska City'Na*309tional Rank, produced tbe book in which the discounts of the bank were entered, from which it appears that the bank discounted the notes of O. S. Rider and Company heretofore referred to on the fourteenth day of August, 1871. There is other testimony tending to prove the existence of the partnership, to which it is unnecessary to refer. The plaintiff in error endeavored to explain several of these transactions, so as to make it appear that he was not a member of the firm after the first day of June, 1871. The question of the existence of the partnership is purely one of fact, and was properly submitted to the jury. The question of the credibility of the witnesses is alone for the jury to determine. The rule is well settled that the verdict of a jury, where the evidence is conflicting, will not be set aside on the ground that it is against the weight of testimony, unless it is clearly so. But in this case there is a clear preponderance of testimony in favor of the verdict.

The instructions asked by plaintiff’s counsel were not applicable to the testimony, and were properly refused. As to the declarations of Rider, that the plaintiff in error was a member of the firm of Rider & Co., it is sufficient to say that where the existence of a partnership is denied, and there is no evidence to establish its existence, the statement of a party claiming to be a partner binds no one but himself. Converse v. Shambaugh, 4 Neb., 376. But this rule has no application where there is testimony establishing the existence of the partnership.

From a careful examination of the testimony it is apparent that the verdict is fully sustained by the evidence. It is also apparent that no error, prejudicial to the plaintiff in error, has occurred on the trial of this cause. The judgment must therefore be affirmed.

In affirming the judgment we place no reliance whatever on the fact that, if the firm was dissolved, as *310claimed by McCann, on the first day of June, 1871, no notice of the dissolution was given or brought to the knowledge of the defendants in error, as they have entirely failed to make' a case.that would entitle them to recover on that ground alone.

Judgment affirmed.