Case Name: AYCOCK SUPPLY COMPANY v. D. M. WINDLEY, MELSON WINDLEY and W. S. RIDDICK
Court: Supreme Court of North Carolina
Jurisdiction: North Carolina
Decision Date: 1918-09-11
Citations: 176 N.C. 18
Docket Number: 
Parties: AYCOCK SUPPLY COMPANY v. D. M. WINDLEY, MELSON WINDLEY and W. S. RIDDICK.
Judges: 
Reporter: North Carolina Reports
Volume: 176
Pages: 18–22

Head Matter:
AYCOCK SUPPLY COMPANY v. D. M. WINDLEY, MELSON WINDLEY and W. S. RIDDICK.
(Filed 11 September, 1918.)
1. Partnership — Negotiable Instruments — Seal—Limitation of Actions.
A promissory note, signed by one of a partnership, with a seal after his own name, in behalf of the firm, or as purchasing agent for the others, is a simple contract as to the other partners, though a contract under seal as to the one thus signing, and is barred as to the others by the three-year statute of limitations.
2. Same — Ratification—Knowledge.
In order for members of a partnership to subsequently ratify the action of one of them in giving the firm’s note under seal, and repel the bar of the three-year statute of limitations, it is necessary to show that the acts relied on were with knowledge that the instrument was under seal.
3. Same — Evidence—Trials.
A note under seal is not necessary to secure a lien for agricultural advances; and where the evidence tends only to show a partnership for farming purposes, and that one of the partners gave the firm’s note under seal, and the other farmed ahd applied the proceeds towards the payment of the note, it is not sufficient to show that the other partner acted with knowledge that the note was under seal, and repel the bar of the three-year statute of limitations as to him.
Walker, X, dissenting; Hoke, X, concurring in dissenting opinion.
ActioN tried before Bond, Jat February Term, 1918, of Beaufobt, upon these issues:
1. Is the defendant W. S. Riddick indebted to plaintiff, and if so, in what amount? Answer: $252, with interest from November 1, 1910.
2. Is said defendant barred by statute of limitations, as alleged in tlie answer? Answer: No.
Judgment was rendered, by consent, against the defendants Daniel M. and Melson Windley.
After verdict the judge made the following order:
“The court, as a matter of law and not in the exercise of discretion, orders the verdict rendered in this case on the second issue set aside and that case stand for trial as to said second issue. It does so because in its opinion it should have charged the jury that if they believed the evidence and found the facts to be as it tended to prove they should answer the second issue ‘Yes.’ ”
To this plaintiff excepts and appeals.
Small, MacLean, Bragaw & Rodman for plaintiff.
John H. Tooly, Harry MoMullan for defendants.

Opinion:
BbowN, J.
The purpose of this action is to recover a personal judgment against defendant W. S. Eiddick on a bond, under seal, reading as follows:
Belhavek-, County of Beaufort, State of N. C.
$549.56. . Date, 13 May, 1910.
On or before the 1st day of November, 1910, with interest from maturity, payable annually, I promise to pay to the order of C. P. Aycock Supply Company five hundred and forty-nine and 56-100 dollars, for value received, without offset, the homestead and all other exemptions are hereby waived as to the debt evidenced by this note.
Witness my hand and seal. D. M. WiNdley, (seal)
Purchasing Agent for Self and W. S. Riddick
and Melson Windley.
Witness: O. C. SwiNdell.
This bond was given for farm supplies and advances and was secured by an agricultural lien of same date upon a crop of cotton, corn and potatoes grown during year 1910 on a farm cultivated by the three defendants as partners. The agricultural lien also secured the sum of $215.88, balance due by the copartnership to plaintiff on advances for year 1909. The defendant Eiddick pleads the three years statute of limitation. This action was commenced 7 December, 1915.
It is too well settled to admit of dispute that where a written instrument is executed on behalf of a copartnership, and an individual partner signs the firm's name and affixes a seal to it, the instrument is the simple contract of the firm, although it is the sealed covenant of the individual partner who executed it. An action is barred on such instrument after three years from the time the cause of action arose as to the copartnership and the members thereof, except as to the individual who executed the instrument and affixed the seal. Burwell v. Linthicum, 100 N. C., 147.
In Fronebarger v. Henry, 51 N. C., 548, Judge Ruffin declares the rule of the common law to be that one partner cannot bind another by deed by virtue of his authority as partner merely, and that such instru ment, under seal, becomes tbe deed of tbe executing party alone. Tbe subject is fully and learnedly discussed by Judge Battle in Fisher v. Pender, 52 N. C., 483.
Tbe learned counsel for plaintiff seeks to avoid tbe effect of tbis established principle by attempting to sbow tbe defendant Riddick ratified tbe act of Windley in executing a sealed instrument executed by a member of tbe firm, and wben so adopted and ratified it becomes tbe bond of eacb member as well as of tbe one wbo executed it. Day v. Lafferty, 4 Ark., 450. Notes to Bank v. Johnson, 14 Ann. Cases, 549, where tbe cases are collected. But these authorities also bold that "a partner cannot be charged with tbe ratification of a sealed note where it does not appear that be knew be was ratifying a sealed note."
In view of these authorities we agree with tbe learned judge that there is no sufficient evidence of an adoption and ratification of tbe instrument as a covenant under seal.
It is true that Windley testified that "Riddick knew about tbe execution of the papers and why they were executed for tbe firm," but there is no evidence that Riddick saw tbe papers or knew that a bond under seal bad been given. He knew that an agricultural lien bad been executed upon tbe crops for supplies and fertilizer, but as such an instrument does not require a seal, and as ordinary promissory notes require no seal, be did not know either from tbe character of tbe papers or from Windley's statement that a sealed instrument that would bind him for ten years bad been executed. Neither do we think tbe evidence of payments shows a ratification of a sealed instrument. Tbe evidence is that Riddick operated tbe farm during 1910 and "received and applied tbe crops that were made." Tbe answer of Riddick admits "that W. S. Riddick paid plaintiff tbe sum of $513.51 on or about 1 January, 1911." A part of that money, it seems, plaintiff applied to tbe debt of 1909 and tbe balance of tbe bond sued on.
Tbis payment is no evidence of ratification, because it does not appear that Riddick knew that tbe instrument was under seal before be made it, and, further, because tbe payment was one Riddick was compelled to make. He was undoubtedly bound by tbe agricultural lien, and tbe law itself compelled tbe application of tbe crops to tbe discharge of such lien. It is an indictable offense to willfully refuse to so apply them and otherwise dispose of them.
It may appear on tbe next trial that Riddick knew of tbe character of tbe instrument and that be adopted and ratified it as a sealed instrument, but tbe evidence on tbe last trial was not sufficient to establish it.
Tbe order granting a new trial on second issue is
Affirmed.