Court Opinion

ID: 6277018
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-02-18 16:03:57.113145+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:00:02.319827
License: Public Domain

Opinion by
Henderson, J.,
The basis of the plaintiff’s claim is an account which he held against a firm of which he was a member. In the prosecution of the business of that firm it was deemed advisable to procure a motor truck and this the plaintiff bought. The partnership having been dissolved by an agreement in writing the plaintiff afterward brought this action to recover the price of the truck and some repairs made on it. Two objections are made to the judgment appealed from: first, that an action of assumpsit cannot be maintained by one member of a firm against his copartners or former partners for an account against or a contribution to the firm; and second, that on a sale of the interest of one partner to the other partners there is a presumption that all accounts of the several partners were taken into consideration and settled; that an individual account could only be recovered on an express agreement of such other partners to pay it and that there was no such agreement in this case. On the first proposition the law is clearly with the appellant. The plaintiff’s account was for *579a contribution to the assets of, or a sale of the truck to, the firm and in either case a compulsory settlement would involve the financial standing of the partners and an ascertainment of the state of the partnership'accounts. The proceeding for this sort of inquiry is a bill in equity or an action of account render. No one can be both plaintiff and defendant in the same action. A reference to Klase v. Bright, 71 Pa. 186; Leidy v. Messinger, 71 Pa. 177; Crow v. Green, 111 Pa. 637 and Murray v. Herrick, 171 Pa. 21, will illustrate the application of this doctrine. In Crow v. Green, the court said: “The case comes within the perfectly familiar rule that one partner cannot sue another partner for a partnership transaction except by bill in equity or action of account render.” Nor is the rule different where the action is brought after the firm is dissolved: McFadden v. Hunt, 5 W. & S. 468; Hall v. Logan, 34 Pa. 331. An exception exists where there is an express agreement of the other members of the firm to pay all the debts due by the partnership or to pay a particular claim or claims of the retiring partner: Beale v. Jennings, 129 Pa. 619. Likewise, an action of assumpsit may be maintained for the purchase money where one partner sells his interest in the firm to the other partners: Draucker v. Arick, 161 Pa. 357; Farrell v. Young, 26 Pa. Superior Ct. 135. But these cases all have their root in the fact of an existing contract which created the liability. To this the appellee replies that there was a contract of dissolution and that the defendants are liable under that contract. The action is not brought, however, on the contract. It is on its face an action by a third person against the defendants for goods sold and delivered and there is nothing in the pleadings to show that the action was on a partnership transaction which is excepted by an agreement to pay from the operation of the principle that one partner may not sue his copartners in assumpsit for a partnership debt.
But if it be admitted that the action is brought on the contract of dissolution does that contract cover the plaintiff’s claim? It recites that the plaintiff and defendants as *580partners dealing together under the name of W. W. Sharp-less Company and W. W. Sharpless Company, Ltd., had become possessed of many goods, wares and debts due them and of real, and personal property and had become “indebted to divers other persons” concerning their joint trading and that the plaintiff consented to sever himself from the partnership for the consideration of $8,000 to be paid by his copartners in consideration of which he transferred to them all the right, property and interest which he had or should have or might have in the firm and in “all and singular the goods, wares, merchandise, accounts receivable and all other property real or personal belonging to said co-partnership or in which said co-partnership had any interest.” The contract contains the further covenant that the defendants “will at all times hereafter pay and satisfy all the creditors to whom the said Charles O. Beaumont is chargeable or indebted for and concerning all the affairs and dealings of the said co-partnership and will at all times hereafter indemnify and save harmless the said Charles O. Beaumont, his heirs, executors and administrators from all the debts and liabilities and every of them of the said co-partnership.” It is under this clause of the contract that the plaintiff contends the defendants are hable for his claim. Two obligations are here assumed by the defendants: first, to pay debts; and second, to save the plaintiff harmless from debts. What are the debts which the defendants are to pay? The contract specifies these. They are the claims of all the creditors to whom the said Charles O. Beaumont is chargeable or indebted for and concerning all the affairs and dealings of the copartnership. These debts do not include the claim in suit for it cannot be said with due regard to the language of this clause or the apparent intention of the parties that Beaumont is chargeable with this debt. It is his claim against the firm; not one for which he is liable to creditors. What the parties meant as expressed in this provision was that Beaumont should be relieved from all liability on account of claims which any other *581creditor might bring against the firm. Does the indemnity clause help the plaintiff out? We think not. That is but a statement in another form of the provision that the defendants will pay all creditors to whom the outgoing partner was liable. After promising to pay that class of creditors the defendants by way of further assurance to the plaintiff agreed to indemnify him and save him harmless from all the debts and liabilities of the copartnership. But he needed no indemnity against his own claim. To include an indebtedness which he and his partners owed himself would be to force a construction on the terms of the contract which the language when reasonably interpreted does not permit. We think this provision is not susceptible of an interpretation which will make it amount to an agreement to pay the Beaumont claim. To indemnify and save harmless means that Beaumont shall be exempted from liability on account of any debts of the firm; not that he is to be paid a claim which he holds. The parties had in mind at the time the payment of debts for they expressly covenanted with reference to obligations for which Beaumont might be sued that they should be paid. We cannot persuade ourselves that the clause with reference to indemnity was intended to cover any other debts of the firm than those for which Beaumont was liable. If this provision had been made applicable to all the debts of the firm the claim of the plaintiff would have been included as was held in Beale v. Jennings, supra, but the contract is not that broad; the creditors to be paid were those who were not the parties to this contract. Moreover, when the parties agreed on a basis of dissolution and the plaintiff retired from the firm for the consideration stated the presumption is that they had in view the assets and liabilities of the firm and that the value of the plaintiff’s interest was agreed on in the light of such assets and liabilities. When, therefore, the plaintiff parted with all his right, property and interest in the partnership it will be assumed that this covered as well his original investment as also his profits still in the *582business and his right as a creditor to take part of the assets. This is the doctrine of Thompson v. Lowe, 111 Ind. 272, where it was held that it will be presumed that the account of the retiring member of a firm was adjusted in ascertaining the value of his interest and that the value was increased or diminished in proportion as he was found to be the debtor or creditor of the firm, if nothing be shown to the contrary. The same principle is announced in Roberts v. Ripley, 14 Conn. 543; Hamilton v. Wells, 182 Ill. 144 and Lesure v. Norris, 65 Mass. 328. The learned trial judge was influenced in reaching the conclusion excepted to by the appellant by a letter written by one of the defendants about two months after the contract of dissolution in which he expressed an expectation of ability to pay the plaintiff's bill for the “auto truck” about April 1. But the other defendant was not shown to have assented to this letter nor to have had any knowledge with reference thereto and it was not competent to give to the contract of dissolution an interpretation as against him which its terms did not express.
The judgment is reversed.