Opinion
April 7, 1922.
De Witt Bailey, for the appellant.
Richard S. Treacy, Jr., for the respondent.
The plaintiff and defendant were copartners from 1915 to 1920 in the selling of fruit as commission men. It appears that the defendant had eight people who are called customers, from whom the fruit was purchased and then the fruit was sold at auction or to commission houses generally. There is no claim of any special customers obtained to whom the goods shall be sold. The partnership was carried on in the name of the Franklin Fruit Company. The partnership expired by its terms. At the end of the partnership the defendant proceeded to do business in his own name and wrote to these parties from whom they had been purchasing goods that the partnership was to be dissolved and he was going to do business in his own name and wanted them to trade with him. There has been no attempt on the part of the plaintiff to do any business since the partnership was dissolved. He has made no attempt to get any fruit from these parties and the probabilities are that if he attempted to get any fruit from these parties he could get it the same as the defendant. The plaintiff furnished the greater part of the money in the partnership. Evidently the defendant furnished the business. At the end of the partnership they had eight or nine of these sellers from whom they got their fruit, for whom they acted as commission men, and the inference is that they were practically the same persons that the defendant had brought to the business.
The defendant did not after the expiration of the partnership assume the name of the Franklin Fruit Company. He did not advertise himself as the successor, but simply that he was going to do business. He had a perfect right to notify these people that he was going to do business individually after the dissolution of the partnership and ask for their patronage.
The referee has charged the defendant below with $2,573.02 for the good will of this partnership appropriated by the defendant. I am wholly unable to understand upon what basis any such claim can rest. The most that I can see is that the defendant procured these fruit sellers to give him fruit, and as I say, there is no evidence that the plaintiff could not have done the same thing. He has not in any way appropriated the good will, or the name, or the stationery of the firm, and I think the judgment should be modified by striking therefrom the charge for the good will of the business, and that the judgment as modified should be affirmed, with costs to appellant.
DOWLING, LAUGHLIN, MERRELL and GREENBAUM, JJ., concur.
Judgment modified as directed in opinion and as so modified affirmed, with costs to appellant. Settle order on notice.