Court Opinion

ID: 6621503
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 20:30:23.212421+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:58:43.963801
License: Public Domain

ELLISON, J.
— Plaintiff was a mercantile corporation engaged in the hardware business and defendants composed a non-trading partnership interested in procuring a patent for a motor car and in constructing a model car to illustrate and show the value, utility and practicability of the proposed patent. R. J. Powell was secretary of the plaintiff corporation and president of the defendant partnership. Plaintiff claimed that Powell drew out money of the plaintiff corporation and used it in the necessary expenses of constructing the motor car and procuring a patent and brought this action for money had and received. On trial in the circuit court plaintiff obtained judgment, whereupon defendants came here for relief.
The evidence in behalf of plaintiff touches upon, or embraces several theories of liability, but it is of a very unsatisfactory and indefinite nature. All we can say of it is that it is unsatisfactory on any theory which it suggests. The principal evidence introduced by plaintiff came from Powell himself. From that it *17is manifest that the plaintiff company was a member of the defendant firm. He states that each of the plaintiff members was a member of the defendant firm though their shares were in his name, and fie calls them silent partners. He stated that the plaintiff,' as a corporation, was not a member of the defendant firm. This latter statement is, however, a mere conclusion of his, since his entire testimony shows that the company was in fact a member. There is no legal impediment to such mem-' bership; for a .corporation without special charter authority may not become a member of another partnership, yet, it undoubtedly acted as such in this case. Powell testified that while the business was transacted by him, yet that the members of the plaintiff company were each interested in the defendant partnership and that the expected profits of the latter were to be divided between them. That the money used to pay for the interest in the defendant partnership was the plaintiff company’s money, drawn out by him as secretary. He said that he expected to charge it to them individually, but not that it had been done. Indeed, there appears not to have been a single individual act taken, but all acts were those of the plaintiff company through Powell, as its secretary, and with the knowledge of his co-members, one being his wife. Furthermore, there was testimony from one of the defendants (nowhere disputed) that when Powell found that his name, only, appeared in the defendant partnership, he stated that it should have been in the plaintiff’s name, but that since it was so put in, he would let it stand. Defendants asked that the jury be directed that if it was believed that the plaintiff was a member of the defendant partnership, the finding should be for defendants. The court improperly refused it. If such was the case, the plaintiff simply paid more than its share of the expenses and this action could not be maintained, since one partner can not sue another in this way. There *18should have been a case in equity for an accounting. Bambrick v. Simms, 132 Mo. 48; Laney v. Fickel, 83 Mo. App. 60; Lyons v. Murray, 95 Mo. 23.
There are further specific portions of the testimony in plaintiff’s behalf which go to show that if plaintiff was not acting in partnership with defendants, and if they have an action against defendants, it would be for reimbursement as a guarantor of defendants’ indebtedness which it paid in compliance with the guaranty. The witness Powell states that he was defendants’ agent and president and that he was plaintiff’s secretary in active charge of its business. That in pursuance of authority from defendants to purchase material and procure labor he attempted to do so, but found that he could not do so on the credit of the defendants and that he therefore acting for plaintiffs, with the knowledge of his partners, guaranteed the payment of the bills. If such is the basis of plaintiffs’ case it is a variance from the petition.
Again, conceding that we are mistaken in the views expressed in the first paragraph and the plaintiff company was not a member of the defendant firm, but (as plaintiff now contends) Powell and the other persons composing the plaintiff firm, were, as individuals, members of the defendant firm, still plaintiff has shown no cause of action against defendants. If any one has used it’s money it was Powell and not the defendants. Powell, whether with or without the consent of his plaintiff copartners, drew the plaintiff’s money and applied it to the payment of obligations of himself and Ms defendant copartners. There is no evidence whatever that the defendant partners knew that Powell was using the plaintiff’s money. There is evidence from which, perhaps, it might be inferred that they knew he was advancing money or incurring indebtedness beyond what the defendants had put in, but not that he was using .the money of others, either by borrowing, or wrongfully appropriating it. When *19Powell took the plaintiff’s money and paid defendants’ obligation to creditors, it did not create any more claim in plaintiff’s behalf against defendants than if he had himself owed defendants and had taken plaintiff’s money and paid them his debt. And yet, in the latter case it has been frequently held that, the party receiving the money, in ignorance of its misappropriation, can not be made to refund it. Smith v. Des Moines Bank, 107 Iowa 620; Stephens v. Board, 79 N. Y. 183; Hatch v. Bank, 147 N. Y. 184; Bohart v. Obern, 36 Kansas 284.
Plaintiff’s claim in its brief and argument is, that it was no party to the use of its money for defendants ’ benefit and, as just stated, there is no evidence that defendants knew its money was being used for their benefit. There was absolutely no contractual relation between them; and realizing that fact, plaintiff founds its action on the theory of money had and received whereby the law would raise a promise to pay. But. it must be kept in mind that defendants had no knowledge of plaintiff’s money and that all that may be inferred against them is that they knew Powell was using money or incurring indebtedness beyond, the sum they had paid in. Powell had no authority to borrow money for them; they were a non-trading partnership with express provision that no partnership debts were to be incurred.
¥e have not overlooked the suggestion that in consequence of Powell being a member of the defendant firm his act of taking and using plaintiff’s money was the act of the defendant firm through him as agent. But that simply recurs back to what we have repeatedly stated, that he had no authority to do so and defendants did not know that he had done so. He simply misappropriated plaintiff’s money without his co-partner defendants’ knowledge and used it in paying joint indebtedness of himself and such copartner defendants. It may be that in a proceeding to adjust the *20accounts between tbe members of the defendant partnership, Powell would be entitled to credit for money advanced beyond Ms rigMful proportion.
We have hesitated as to whether the judgment should be merely reversed or reversed and remanded, but have concluded that it may be that plaintiff may be able to fall upon some certain and definite legal cause of complaint under the present petition, or under an amendment thereof. But of this we do not pretend to decide.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
All concur.