The agreement upon which the action is *352founded contains no special promise on the part of the defendant to any person or persons, and the contracting party on the other side is N. Winsor, “ as agent for G., H. & Co; ” and there is also a stipulation for “ the customary commissions for procuring said freight or charter to be allowed to said Winsor.” A part of this contract is personal, as between Winsor and the defendant; and if Winsor had not been such agent, or if his act had been legally disavowed, as not within his authority, he would have been responsible to the defendant for the damages sustained by him, in case a cargo had not been furnished. But the agency having been affirmed, and a breach of the agreement alleged to have taken place on the part of the defendant, the question arises, who are the proper parties to prosecute him for the non-performance of his agreement.
The plaintiffs are A. Gage, Hittinger, Sawyer and Frothingham ; and the defendant insists that, if Winsor is not the proper person to bring the action, then the present plaintiffs and Charles P. Gage are parties alone entitled to prosecute, if any persons have the right to do it; and we are called upon to decide the point thus presented. Gage, Hittinger & Co. are extensive dealers in ice, having establishments for the procuring of it at Fresh Pond, Spy Pond and elsewhere, and for sending it to Charlestown and shipping it there; and wishing to establish a branch of the business in Mobile, they made an agreement with Charles P. Gage, under the firm of the Fresh Pond Ice Co., (afterwards altered to that of Charles P. Gage & Co.,) for supplying the city of Mobile with ice.
The agreement between them was in writing and is in the case ; and in deciding the question before us, it will be necessary briefly to state some of its provisions. It provides that Gage, Hittinger & Go. will themselves furnish the ice at given rates per ton, and will ship to Mobile such quantities as C. P. Gage shall order, to keep the market supplied, and that C. P. Gage will give his personal attention to the sale of the ice, and to the promotion of the interests of the company at Mobile. C. P. Gage & Co. agree to pay, out of the proceeds *353of said ice, to Gage, Hittinger &, Co. the cost of the ice, to pay the rent of an ice house and all freights and expenses on the ice shipped to Mobile, and all expenses there; and the profits, if any, they agree to divide equally.
It is not contended by either party that C. P. Gage was an agent of Gage, Hittinger & Co. to be paid by a share of the profits, or that he was a dormant partner; but it is agreed that they were copartners in the Mobile business; and we are called upon to determine whether the contract of Winsor was made for account of Gage, Hittinger, Sawyer & Frothingham, and that they are to be treated as agents for the house of C. P. Gage & Co. or whether it was a contract made for the partnership, which consisted of A. Gage, Hittinger, Sawyer, Frothingham and C. P. Gage, and in which they jointly were personally and beneficially interested.
It is contended by the counsel for the plaintiffs that Gage Hittinger & Co. and C. P. Gage & Co. were not only different firms, but were in law different persons; that Gage, Hittinger & Co. were the agents of C. P. Gage & Co.; and that in this contract they were so far principals, that they may sue in their own names, though they might have joined C. P. Gage in the writ. On the other hand, the counsel for the defendant insists that he made the bargain with Winsor, without knowing who G., H. & Co. were, and that, if his contract was not with Winsor alone, then A. Gage, Hittinger, Sawyer, Frothingham and C. P. Gage were the contracting parties ; or, if C. P. Gage & Co. are considered as an independent firm, employing Gage, Hittinger & Co. as their agents, and the latter employed Winsor, who contracted with the defendant, then he denies that such intermediate agents can maintain an action in their own names, and that any such case can be found in the books.
The question before us, like many other cases as to the proper joinder of parties, is not free from difficulty ; but on a consideration of the facts as they appear in the case, we think it may be settled without discussing the point raised on the argument, as to the rights of intermediate agents to *354bring actions in their qwn names to enforce contracts in behalf of their principals.
Partnerships often exist, in our cities, consisting of two or more individuals, who have a branch of their house in another city, where some other person is connected with them, and where he appears as head of the firm ; hut the concerns of the branch establishment are often limited to a particular business or traffic connected with the place where the branch is established, while the business of the other or principal firm is general.
In the present case, the Charlestown house of Gage, Hittinger, Sawyer & Frothingham, were largely concerned in the ice business in the home and foreign markets.
The same persons and C. P. Gage, in pursuance of the aforesaid agreement, were jointly concerned in the ice business between Charlestown and Mobile, which was conducted in Charlestown under the name of Gage, Hittinger & Co., the same partnership name with that of their general business; and in Mobile under the name of C. P. Gage & Co., which was the style of the firm in that city ; and we are of opinion that all contracts relating to the Mobile business, whether made in Charlestown, Boston, Mobile or elsewhere, and whether made in the name of Gage, Hittinger & Co., or of C. P. Gage & Co., were in fact made for the same persons, and in the profit or loss of which they were jointly interested ; and the question of liability does not turn, we conceive, on the fact whether the contract was made in the name of the one firm or the other, or whether it was entered into in Charlestown or Mobile, but whether it was for and on account of the Mobile concern. And as this appears to have been the character of the transaction, in the present case, C. P. Gage, as a partner, was one of the contracting parties, is equally interested with the persons residing in Charlestown, and should join them in the suit.
The law looks beyond mere names and firms, and sees who are the real parties, and treats them as the persons who are to enforce or defend their contracts. Manuf. & Mech. Bank *355v. Winship, 5 Pick. 11. Etheridge v. Binney, 9 Pick. 272. Baring v. Crafts, 9 Met. 380. Swan v. Steele, 7 East, 210.
The present agreement with the defendant was for a vessel to take a cargo of ice to Mobile, the freight or charter of which, as well as the cost of it, was to be paid by the funds of the firm there, was an item in their accounts, and in the profit or loss upon which C. P. Gage had a common and joint interest with Gage, Hittinger, Sawyer & Frothirigham. In other words, it was a partnership contract of the five individuals ; and though made in the name of Gage, Hittinger & Co. was for the account and benefit of the five. And it is held as law, that a transaction or contract entered into or made by one partner, and in his sole name, if in fact a partnership transaction, is not only such as between themselves, but must be enforced in the name of the partners. This, we think, is clearly settled in the case of Garrett v. Handley, 5 Dowl. & Ryl. 319, and 4 Barn. & Cres. 664. That was a suit where one partner declared on a guaranty given to him alone for the repayment of money to be advanced to another on the strength of the guaranty of the defendant ; but it appearing that the money so advanced was out of the partnership funds, and not that of the individual partner suing, the court held that the guaranty ought to have been declared upon according to its legal effect, and that the individual partner could not sue alone. And with this agrees the case of Alexander v. Barker, 2 Crompt. & Jerv. 133, and 2 Tyrw. 140. There the promise was made to one member of a firm, on application to him for a loan of money; but it appearing that the money was advanced out of the funds of the firm, the court held that the partners were the proper parties to sue for the money lent; acting on the principle that those who are beneficially interested are the parties to sue. And so here, the contract, though in form with Gage, Hittinger & Go. was in fact the contract of the five partners, and they are the parties entitled to the redress sought for, in a suit to recover damages for the breach of contract.
*356We think the mistake of the plaintiffs’ counsel lies in treating the partners here as agents for the house in Mobile, and authorized, as such, to enforce contracts made with third persons, as principals. But we are of opinion that the distinct characters of agents and partners are not thus to be blended ^ and though the business is done here in the name of Gage, Hittinger & Co. for the Mobile house, it is not done by them in the capacity of agents, but as partners, and in the manner in which, for convenience between themselves, they choose to carry on the business. The fact that the partners here do business in the name of their general firm, and the partner in Mobile does it in the name of the firm there, cannot affect the interests of third persons, who have a legal right to treat them as partners in the transactions of such joint business.
This is one of those cases respecting the proper joinder of parties, in which lawyers and judges may, on the several views taken by them, come to different conclusions. While we regret, in this case, to differ among ourselves, we have reason, on the other hand, to be grateful that we are so generally brought to the same conclusions, though we may sometimes arrive at the like results for different reasons. In this case, a majority of the court are of opinion that the exceptions should be overruled, and the nonsuit confirmed.
Shaw, C. J.I regret that I cannot agree with my brethren in the opinion now given. That opinion is, that upon the facts appearing in the report, Charles P. Gage was a party to the contract sued upon, and because he is not made a party to the action it cannot be maintained. The question is not whether he was interested in the results of the contract. If he was, and that interest was not or could not be removed, he was not a competent witness. But one may be consequentially interested in many ways, when he is not a party.
This is an action brought to recover damages for the nonperformance of a plain, direct and express contract, in which Rollins the defendant- on the one side, engaged with the fi m *357of Gage, Hittinger & Co. on the other side, to carry a cargo of ice to Mobile, at an agreed rate. The contract was made, on the part of the plaintiffs, by a broker professing to act as their agent, and was afterwards ratified by them. Then we must inquire, who are designated by the firm Gage, Hittinger & Co. The evidence is clear, that the general firm included the four persons named in the writ, to wit, Addison Gage, Jacob Hittinger, T. T. Sawyer and J. H. Frothing-ham, a firm carrying on the ice business extensively, in all its branches, in Charlestown. In this firm Charles P. Gage was not a partner. But they entered into a sub-contract with Charles P. Gage, for the establishment of a house or agency at Mobile, for the sale of ice, to be personally superintended by him. In that sub-concern, the general firm were partners, but that did not make Charles P. Gage a partner in the general concern.
Then if we look at the terms of the sub-contract, between Gage, Hittinger & Co., on the one side, and Charles P. Gage on the other, the result will be the same. Gage, Hittinger & Co. agree to ship ice to Charles P. Gage & Co. at Mobile. An agreement to ship is an agreement to contract with ship-owners for the transportation of merchandize. The entering into such contract as the present, therefore, was a part of the business to be done by the Charlestown firm, and not a part of the business of the Mobile firm. The plaintiffs, therefore, composing the firm of Gage, Hittinger & Co., were doing what they stipulated with C. P. Gage that they would do, that is, to furnish the ice here, and contract for the transportation of it.
It is true that, by the sub-contract, Charles P. Gage & Co., the Mobile firm, were to pay the freight at Mobile. That appears to me to make no difference. A ship-ownei has two remedies for his freight; first, the contract of the shipper, and secondly, a lien on the cargo. Now the stipulation of C. P. Gage with Gage, Hittinger & Co., that he would pay the freight at Mobile, out of the proceeds, was only stipulating to do that which, as consignee, he would be *358bound to do, that is, to pay the freight before he could receive the cargo. But that did not make him a contracting party with the ship-owner.
It appears to me that the contract entered into by the defendant, to carry this cargo of ice, was made with the firm of Gage, Hittinger & Co. in which Charles P. Gage was not included, and that the plaintiffs are well entitled to maintain the action without joining him.
Exceptions overruled.