Citation Numbers: 38 Mo. App. 309, 1889 Mo. App. LEXIS 461
Judges: Rombauer
Filed Date: 12/17/1889
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiffs, a firm composed of C. H. Conrades and C. F. Ellerbrake, brought suit in their firm name of C. EL Conrades & Co., before a justice of the peace, against the defendant upon an account for goods sold and delivered. The account filed by them, as their cause of action, indicated upon its face that it was owned by C. EL Conrades and C. F. Ellerbrake, but all the other papers in the case before the justice, including the justice’s docket entries, purport to relate to a suit by C. H. Conrades & Co.
Upon trial anew in the circuit court,'the defendant’s counsel objected to the introduction of any
The defendant appealing assigns for error the ruling of the court in admitting evidence in support of a cause of action, prosecuted in the firm name, and not in the individual names, of the parties in interest.
That the ruling of the court was erroneous, may readily be conceded. In this state as in others, suits must be brought in the names of the individual members of the firm, and not in the name of the firm, which is a mere ideal entity. Who are the parties plaintiff or defendant to a suit before the justice, is to be determined, prima facie, by the justice’s docket entries, and not by names contained on papers filed before the justice, in which they are not even designated as parties, plaintiff or defendant. But it does not follow from this, that a suit, instituted before a justice in a firm name, is a nullity, and incapable of amendment, on appeal, by adding the names of the individual members of the firm. That this may be done has expressly been decided in House v. Duncan, 50 Mo. 453, which case, on that point at least, was recognized as good law in Beattie v. Hill, 60 Mo. 75, and has never been overruled. On the other hand the case of Fowler & Wild v. Williams, 62 Mo. 404, decides that, although a suit
In conformity with these decisions, we must conclude that, while the court erred in not sustaining the defendant’s objection, and likewise erred in not permitting the plaintiffs to amend, neither of these errors affected the substantial merits of the case, and as the statute, section 3775, Revised Statutes, 1879, prohibits us from reversing a judgment,- unless we believe that-error was committed by the. trial court against the appellant, materially affecting the merits of the action, we must affirm the judgment. All the judges concurring, the j udgment is affirmed.