The plaintiff, residing in the parish of West Baton Rouge, instituted this action against Wm. H. Bushnell, alleged to be a resident of some of tbe northern or eastern States, T. W. Colwell, a resident of West Baton Rouge, and John S. Woodward, alleged to be a resident of New Orleans, for tbe settlement of a partnership which had existed between tbe plaintiffs and defendants.
The partnership appears to have carried on its business chiefly in New Orleans, but to have been dissolved about two years prior to the institution of the suit.
*296The defendant Colwell, by exception, declined the jurisdiction of the court in New Orleans, on the ground that he resided, as alleged by plaintiff himself, in West Baton Rouge.
A few days after the exception was filed, and before it was tried, the plaintiff suggested to the court that John S. Woodward, believed to-be a resident of New Orleans, really resided in Mississippi, and procured the appointment of a curator ad hoc to represent him.
The demand of the petition was for a judgment against the defendants in solido. The court overruled the exception, and, the cause having been tried on the merits, rendered judgment against the defendants in solido for $14,752 77, and the defendant Colwell alone appealed.
The facts above stated show that at the time the suit was begun the partnership had been dissolved for nearly two years, and that not one of the parties to the suit or to the parnership resided in the parish of Orleans.
It was impossible that the defendant, Colwell, residing in West Baton Rouge, could be legally sued in New Orleans, unless his case came within some of the exceptions to the general prohibition contained in the law of 1861, and now embodied in article 162, Rev. C. P. He could not even consent to be sued in New Orleans unless in these exceptional cases.
The exceptions referred to, as they existed at the time this suit was instituted, are now compiled in articles 163-8 of the Rev. C. P.; but in none do we find any authority for the case at bar.
It does not come under section 2 of article 165, for that refers to matters of partnership “as long as the partnership continues.” It does fall within section 6 of the same article; for, in the first place the defendants are not sued as “joint obligors,” 9 La. 547; and in the second place, if they were so sued the suit was not brought “ at the domicile of anyone of.them.” ♦
We are constrained to the conclusion that the exception should have been maintained.
It is therefore ordered that the judgment appealed from be reversed as to appellant, and his exception of domicile maintained, and that this suit as to appellant, be dismissed at plaintiffs’ costs.