To enlarge his business, Goldsmith, the original plaintiff,
authorized a third person to go to St. Louis to negotiate an
arrangement with some commission house there to accept consignments
of cigars from him and to sell the same on his account, agreeing
with the person so authorized to give him half the profits, with a
guaranty that his compensation should amount to eighteen hundred
dollars per annum. He made the arrangement with the defendants,
stipulating as to their commissions and that the cigars should be
shipped at Baltimore, in bond, subject to duties and charges, and
notified the plaintiff of the terms and conditions; whereupon the
plaintiff wrote the defendants a letter, concluding with these
words: "All shipped to your house. I will hold you responsible,"
and sent two invoices of cigars, which were duly received.
Afterwards, the person who negotiated the arrangement wrote an
order to the defendants to deliver all the cigars, not sold, to
another firm, upon receiving whatever sums they had advanced. That
firm paid the advances, received the cigars and sold them, but no
portion of the proceeds ever came to the hands of the plaintiff.
The defense was that the person who gave the order was either a
partner or an agent of the plaintiff, and in either capacity had a
right to direct a transfer of the cigars, and thus exonerate the
defendants from all liability.
Held:
1. Actual participation in the profits, as principals in
general, creates a partnership as between the participant and third
persons, whatever may have been the real relation of the former to
the firm, but the rule has no application to a case of mere service
or special agency, where the employee has no power in the firm and
no such interest in the profits as will enable him to go into a
court of equity to enforce a lien for the same or to compel an
account. Unless such employee is in some way interested in the
profits of the business, as principal, he cannot be regarded as
falling within the general rule, because, when not so interested,
his condition is not different from that of an ordinary creditor.
Cases may arise, on one side and the other of the line, where the
difference between them is so slight that it may appear to be
unsubstantial, yet the distinction itself is well founded in
reason, and the only difficulty is in the application of the
principle on which it rests. No such difficulty, however, occurs in
this case, for the defendants were a party to the arrangement and
knew the relation which the person who negotiated it sustained to
them and to the plaintiff, and they also knew that the goods had
been sent by the plaintiff and received by them on the terms and
conditions specified in the plaintiff's letter. He was not,
therefore, a partner in fact, or as between the plaintiff and
defendants.
2. He was not an agent of the plaintiff authorized to withdraw
the consignments, or to exonerate the defendants from their
obligation to account for the sales.
Page 65 U. S. 537
On the contrary, the arrangement was that the cigars should
remain in their custody and control, and that they should stand
responsible for the proceeds, and the case shows that it was never
changed. The court below were right in instructing the jury that
there was no evidence to sustain the second ground of defense.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the court.
MR. JUSTICE CLIFFORD delivered the opinion of the court.
The declaration in this case was filed on the second day of
September, 1858, by the present defendant, who was the plaintiff in
the court below. It was an action of assumpsit, and the declaration
contained five counts. Without attempting to give any very precise
analysis of the declaration, it will be sufficient to say, that the
plaintiff alleged, that on the twenty-ninth day of August, 1857, at
the special instance and request of the defendants, he sent and
consigned to them sundry cases and boxes of cigars of great value,
in order that they might sell and dispose of the same for him, on
their guaranty of sales, for a certain commission or reward, and
that the defendants, in consideration thereof, undertook, and then
and there promised to sell and dispose of the cigars on his
account, and to be answerable to him for the due payment of the
sums for which the same should be sold, and pay over the proceeds
to him. And the complaint is that they not only neglected and
refused to perform their promises in that behalf, but that they
disposed of the consignment to their own use. Defendants appeared
and
Page 65 U. S. 538
demurred to the declaration, but the court overruled the
demurrer, and the parties subsequently went to trial upon the
general issue. Testimony was introduced on both sides, and after
the arguments were closed, the defendants presented to the court
certain prayers for instruction, which were refused. And under the
instructions given by the court, the jury returned their verdict in
favor of the plaintiff for the sum of three thousand dollars.
Exceptions were duly taken by the defendants, not only to the
refusal of the court to instruct the jury as requested, but also to
the instructions given, and the question to be decided is whether,
upon the facts disclosed in the record, there was any error in the
action of the court. It appears from the evidence that the
plaintiff was a merchant, residing at Baltimore, in the State of
Maryland, and that the defendants were commission merchants, doing
business at St. Louis, in the State of Missouri. For the purposes
of this investigation, it is conceded that the cigars were sent by
the plaintiff, and that they were duly received by the defendants,
and there is no dispute as to the quantity or their value. Some of
the cigars were forwarded by railroad, but the largest invoice was
shipped, in bond, with the understanding that the defendants would
make the necessary advances for the duties and other charges.
Accordingly they received the cases and boxes containing the cigars
at the custom house, and paid the duties and freight. All of the
cigars were sent and received under the terms and conditions
specified in a certain letter from the plaintiff to the defendants,
to which more particular reference will presently be made. Prior to
the date of that letter, it had been agreed between the plaintiff
and one H. F. Hook, that the latter should go to St. Louis, and if
practicable, make an arrangement there with some responsible
commission house to accept consignments of cigars from the
plaintiff, and sell and dispose of them on his account. It seems
that Hook wanted employment, and the plaintiff wanted to extend his
business. They accordingly agreed to make an effort of that kind,
and if successful, that Hook should have half the profits, with a
guaranty from the plaintiff that his compensation should amount to
eighteen hundred dollars. Pursuant to that understanding,
Page 65 U. S. 539
Hook went to St. Louis and made an arrangement with the
defendants, and communicated the terms and conditions of it to the
plaintiff. By the terms of this arrangement the defendants were to
sell for a commission of two and a half percent, and were to
guaranty the sales for a like commission. They were to receive the
goods in bond, at the custom house, make the necessary advances for
duties and charges, and accept drafts drawn by the plaintiff
against the consignments. Having learned the nature of the
proffered terms, the plaintiff, on the twenty-eighth day of August,
1857, wrote to the defendants the letter to which reference has
already been made. Referring in express terms to that arrangement,
he informed the defendants by that letter that he had consigned to
them an invoice of cigars, and requested them to render to him,
when the cigars were sold, an account of the sales; and what is
more, he therein stated to the defendants that if they were willing
to make advances on such goods, he would consign to them, in a
short time, additional invoices to a large amount; and in
conclusion, employed the following language: "All shipped to your
house by me; I will hold you responsible." Full proof is exhibited
in the record, that all the cigars in controversy were sent and
received under the arrangement referred to in that letter, and the
person who made the arrangement with the defendants testified that
it was never changed. He remained in St. Louis to negotiate sales,
and he also testified that he managed the whole business and
conducted the correspondence with the plaintiff. Defendants
dissolved their partnership on the first day of January, 1858, so
that it became desirable for them to get rid of their consignments;
and on the fifteenth day of the same month, all of the cigars not
previously sold were turned over to another firm, pursuant to an
order drawn on them by the person who negotiated the arrangement.
That step was taken without consulting the plaintiff, and without
his knowledge, and ten days later the defendants wrote to the
plaintiff and declined to render an account of sales, affirming
that they had made none, and assuming, in effect, that the person
who negotiated the arrangement was the general agent of the
plaintiff with respect to the cigars,
Page 65 U. S. 540
and they informed the plaintiff in the same letter, that he, the
supposed agent, on withdrawing the consignment, had paid back to
them what money they had advanced on the same. Much other testimony
was introduced on the one side or the other, but the statement
already given exhibits the material facts necessary to be
considered in this stage of the investigation.
Two theories were assumed by the defendants at the trial, and
the prayers for instruction were all based upon the one or the
other of those theories. It was insisted, in the first place, that
the person who negotiated the arrangement and finally withdrew the
consignment was a partner with the plaintiff in the whole
transaction, and if not, then, secondly, that he was the agent of
the plaintiff, and, as such, had authority to withdraw the
consignment and acquit the defendants from all further
responsibility. But the presiding justices instructed the jury, in
substance and effect, that the defendants were responsible for the
cigars consigned under the letter of instructions, whether sold
directly by themselves as factors of the plaintiff, or by Hook, as
authorized to negotiate sales, provided the cigars were received
into their possession; that the defendants were authorized by the
letter to sell the cigars in the usual course of business, and if
they found that Hook was also authorized to negotiate sales, then
the sales by him in the usual way were also valid, and that the
defendants, by the letter, were to make the advances, have two and
a half percent commissions on sales, and two and a half percent on
guaranty of sales, and were to account to the plaintiff. Among
other things, they also instructed the jury, that there was no
evidence to show any authority from the plaintiff to turn the
cigars over to an auctioneer to be sold, and that the plaintiff,
therefore, was entitled to recover the net proceeds of the cigars
sold, either by the defendant or Hook, if the latter was authorized
to negotiate sales, and the market value at St. Louis of the
residue, less the charges paid for freight, storage, insurance,
drayage, and duties. Both of the defenses set up in the court below
are still insisted upon in this Court, but we think neither of them
can be sustained, and that the instructions given to the jury were
correct.
Page 65 U. S. 541
1. Partnership is usually defined to be a voluntary contract
between two or more competent persons, to place their money,
effects, labor, and skill, or someone or all of them, in lawful
commerce or business, with the understanding that there shall be a
communion of the profits thereof between them. But partnership and
community of interest, independently considered, are not always the
same thing; for the first, as between the partners themselves, is
founded upon the co-partnership agreement which prescribes the
relation they bear to each other, and of itself creates the
community of interest; but the last may exist, notwithstanding
there has been no agreement between the parties. Part owners of a
ship, for example, are uniformly treated as tenants in common, and
not as partners, although it cannot be denied that there is a
community of interest between them in every part of the vessel, and
each is entitled to a share of her earnings in proportion to his
undivided interest, and must also share the loss. Joint owners of
merchandise may consign it for sale abroad to the same consignee;
and if each gives separate instructions for his own share, it is
well settled law that these interests are several, and that they
are not to be treated as partners in the adventure. Numerous
illustrations of the principle are to be found in the decisions of
the courts, of which we will give but one more at the present time.
Where a broker or other agent purchases goods for several persons,
each agreeing to take a certain portion of the entire parcel, it is
clear, if there is no arrangement that the goods shall be sold on
joint account, that the transaction does not amount to a
partnership, although there is undeniably a community of interest
in the goods so purchased. These examples will be sufficient to
show that while every partnership is founded on a community of
interest, it is, nevertheless, incorrect to suppose that every
community of interest necessarily constitutes the relation of
partnership within the meaning of the commercial law. Whenever it
appears that there is a community of interest in the capital stock,
and also a community of interest in the profit and loss, then it is
clear that the case is one of actual partnership between the
parties themselves, and of course it is
Page 65 U. S. 542
so as to third persons. All of the decided cases, however, agree
that it is seldom or never essential that both of these ingredients
should concur in the case in order to establish that relation.
Cases occur, undoubtedly, where a community of interest in the
property, without any regard to the profits, will almost
necessarily lead to the conclusion that the relation between the
parties was that of partnership; and, under some circumstances,
that conclusion will follow, although the sale of the property for
the joint interest may not be contemplated by the parties. On the
other hand, it is equally clear that there may be such a community
of interest in the profits without regard to loss, and without any
community of interest whatever in the property as will establish
that relation. Participation in the profits, however, will not
alone create a partnership between the parties themselves as to the
property, contrary to their intention. But merchants and traders
are often justly held to be partners as to third persons, where
they are not to be deemed such, expressly or impliedly, as between
themselves. Judge Story distributes the cases in which such a
liability exists as to third persons into five classes, and it is
obvious that the present case does not fall within any principle of
that classification. Story on Part., section 542; Greenl.Ev.,
section 482. He admits, however, that the pressure of the general
doctrine is most severely felt in that class of cases where all the
parties charged, as partners, are to share the profits between
them, but the losses are to be borne exclusively by one of their
number. Actual participation in the profits as principal, we think,
creates a partnership as between the parties and third persons,
whatever may be their intentions in that behalf, and
notwithstanding the dormant partner was not expected to participate
in the loss beyond the amount of the profits. Every man who has a
share of the profits of a trade or business ought also to bear his
share of the loss, for the reason, that in taking a part of the
profits, he takes a part of the fund of the trade on which the
creditor relies for payment.
Grace v. Smith, 2 W. Black
998;
Waugh v. Carver, 2 H. Black 235. Actual partnership,
as between a creditor and the dormant partner, is considered by the
law to subsist
Page 65 U. S. 543
where there has been a participation in the profits, although
the participant may have expressly stipulated with his associates
against all the usual incidents to that relation.
Pond v.
Pittard, 3 Mee. & Wels. 357. That rule, however, has no
application whatever to a case of service or special agency, where
the employee has no power as a partner in the firm and no interest
in the profits, as property, but is simply employed as a servant or
special agent, and is to receive a given sum out of the profits, or
a proportion of the same, as a compensation for his services.
Merchants are obliged to have clerks, and oftentimes find it
necessary to employ brokers or special agents to effect sales, and
it is no more detrimental to their creditors that such employees
should be paid out of the profits of their trade than from any
other source of income within their disposal. Unless the supposed
dormant partner is in some way interested in the profits of the
business, as principal, it is plain that he cannot bring suit as a
partner, and go into equity and compel an account; nor can it be
held that he has any such lien on the profits as a court of equity
may enforce; and if not, then his condition is the same as that of
an ordinary creditor, and he must pursue his remedy against his
employer.
Denny v. Cabot, 6 Met. 90;
Vanderburg v.
Hull, 20 Wen. 70. Repeated decisions have recognized this
distinction, and although it may happen, as heretofore, that cases
will arise on the one side or the other of the line, approaching in
their facts so near to each other that the difference between them
may appear to be unsubstantial, yet the distinction itself, we
think, is well founded in reason, and that the only difficulty is
in the application of the principle on which it rests.
Hallet
v. Desban, 14 Lou.An. 529.
No such difficulty, however, arises in this case. Defendants
knew the exact relation which Hook sustained to them, and to the
plaintiff, and they had the letter of the plaintiff in their
possession, informing them that he should hold them responsible for
the cigars. They knew what the arrangement was, and that the goods
had been sent by the plaintiff and received by them, on the terms
and conditions specified in that letter.
Page 65 U. S. 544
Irrespective of the guaranty, it is difficult to see how Hook
could have any interest in the profits as a partner with the
plaintiff. He had no interest in the property, and by the
arrangement which he himself negotiated, the cigars were to remain
for sale in the custody and control of the defendants, as
commission merchants, and they stood responsible to the plaintiff
for the proceeds. But he did not rely upon the profits for his
compensation, for unless one-half the profits exceeded eighteen
hundred dollars a year, he would neither be benefited nor injured
by the success or failure of the adventure, except so far as the
latter result might have a tendency to induce his employer to
dispense with his services. Little or nothing was ever realized
from the enterprise, and of course no excess of profits over the
amount of the guaranty was ever earned. It is quite obvious,
therefore, that the theory of the defendants on this branch of the
case cannot be sustained.
2. It is insisted by the defendants that Hook was the agent of
the plaintiff, and as such that he had authority to withdraw the
cigars from their custody and control, and turn them over to the
other firm. On that point, the presiding justice instructed the
jury that there was no evidence in the case to support that theory,
and, after a careful examination of the evidence exhibited in the
transcript, we entirely concur in that view of the case, and the
judgment of the circuit court is therefore
Affirmed with costs.