Partnership is created on the
principle of agency. Section 18 pronounces a partner as the agent of the firm
for the purposes of the firm’s business.
It means when two or more persons
agree to carry on a business and share the profits of it, each becomes a
principal, and each becomes an agent for the other, and hence, each is bound by
the other’s contract in carrying on the business.
To bind the firm, a partner
should undertake to act under the firm’s name or in any other manner,
expressing or implying an intention to bind the firm (Section 22). Secondly, to
bind a firm for the act done by the partner, it is necessary that the said act
falls within the scope of the partner’s authority. Such an authority may be
conferred expressly or implicitly through the acts of the partner in the course
of carrying on such business.
Example:
Suppose a firm borrows money from
a bank. Presume John, a partner has borrowed the said amount from Hopes Bank.
Now, if this is to be binding on the firm, the lending bank must ascertain if,
in the kind of business carried on by the firm, borrowing is authorised. Say,
if the firm is carrying on a professional activity, like treating patients,
this obviously does not constitute an integral feature of the business.
Therefore, John cannot have implied authority to borrow and, hence, cannot bind
the firm.
On the other hand, if the firm is
carrying on trading activity, borrowing usually constitutes an integral part of
it and, therefore, John enjoys implied authority and it would have a binding on
the firm.
The essentials of an implied
authority can be summarized (Section 19) as:
- The act must have been done in the capacity as a partner (borrowing on behalf of a proposed partnership does not constitute a binding on the other partners after the partnership is constituted, although the funds have been used for the partnership business).
- The act must be on behalf of the firm.
Box 4: Firm – Execution of
Documents
While getting documents executed by a partner on behalf of
the firm, a lending banker ensures that the documents are executed in such a
fashion that it binds the firm. For example:
The Madras High Court held that
this sort of description does not bind the firm and other partners as it
merely states a fact and the signatures are not on behalf of the firm.
It should be as under:
Mohsin Bhai
Partner
This style of observation is held
to be a right answer to the question “whether the instrument is so drawn that
in form it binds the firm”.
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- The act must be for the purpose of business of the firm.
- The act must be in the firm’s name.
- The act must be done to carry on the business in the usual way.
Box 5: SBI vs. SIMCO ENGG Works –
Punjab and Haryana High Court – 11 (2005) BC 199
Facts of the Case
The State Bank of India had advanced various credit facilities
to M/s. SIMCO ENGG Works, a partnership firm. Loan documents were executed by
Defendants 2 to 5 as partners on behalf of the firm, and Defendant 6 stood as
a guarantor for repayment of the loan. The firm defaulted on repayment of
credit facilities. The plaintiff, State Bank of India, filed a suit for the
recovery of the loan amount with interest, against the partnership firm
(Defendant 1), partners and guarantor.
Defendants 3 and 4 just put up their appearance and
contested the suit by filing a joint written statement which inter alia
pleaded that they had never requested for any loan facilities and no amount
had been received by them. It was alleged that Defendant 5—Kusum Malik had
applied for the loan facilities from the bank and got signatures on unfilled
documents from Defendants 3 and 4. It was further argued that she had
authorized R Kathuria as manager to operate the account without the knowledge
of the other partners in violation of Clause 7 and 11 of the partnership
deed. Clause 7 and 11 of the partnership deed permit the authorization to
operate the bank account by any of the partners or manager as mutually
decided by all the partners. Hence, Defendant 1—the partnership firm and
(other than Defendant 5—Kusum Malik) Defendants 2 to 4 could not be made
liable.
The Trial Court decreed the suit filed by the bank for the
recovery of the loan amount against Defendant 5 (Kusum Malik) and Defendant 6
(Vallab Das Malik) who guaranteed the loan amount. Accepting the contention
of the defendants, the suit against Defendants 1 to 4 was dismissed.
The plaintiff appealed against the judgment and decree of
the trial court to the First Appellate Court, seeking the enforcement of
liability against the partnership firm and other defendants excluded by the
trial court. The Appellate Court relied on Clauses 7 and 11 of the
partnership deed and dismissed the appeal.
Not convinced with the judgment, the bank filed a second
appeal in the High Court.
Issues
Held
The appeal was allowed on the following grounds:
Case Notes
Source: The Icfai
Journal of Banking Law, Vol. III, No. 3, 2005.
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7.1. Authority
to Acknowledge Debts
As per the provisions under Section 20(2) of the
Limitation Act, partners are not chargeable by reason only of an acknowledgment
of a debt or part payment thereunder by a partner. It would mean that, unless
the partner possesses an express authority to acknowledge a debt incurred by
the firm, acknowledgment or part-payment of debt by him would not operate
against other partners.
However, while interpreting Section 19 of the
Limitation Act, the Delhi High Court observed that the acknowledgment made in
the course of a partnership business would have a binding on other partners
(AIR 1992 Delhi 174).
7.2. Authority
to Draw Negotiable Instruments
A partner of a trading concern enjoys the power of
drawing, accepting, or endorsing bills or promissory notes for the purpose of
the firm in the ordinary course of business. In other instances, a partner
would only be enjoying an implied authority for carrying out such acts. This
obviously necessitates that a third party, dealing with a partner, should know
about his implied authority, or else it may pose a threat with regard to
binding of the firm.
Sub-Section (2) of Section 19 of the Limitation Act
excludes certain powers from a partner’s implied authority such as:
- Authority to submit a dispute relating to the business of the firm to arbitration;
- Power to open a banking account on behalf of the firm in his own name;
- Power to compromise or relinquish any claim or portion of a claim by the firm;
- Power to withdraw a suit or litigation or to admit any liability on behalf of the firm in a suit or proceedings against the firm;
- Power to acquire or alienate property on behalf of the firm, e.g., sale mortgage; and
- Power to enter into partnership with another firm.
Obviously, a partner who undertakes acts of foregoing
nature cannot bind the firm, unless he is expressly authorised to do so, or such
acts are ratified subsequently, or they are sustainable on the strength of
custom in the trade/practices.
Section 20 of the Act states that partners may extend
or restrict the partner’s implied authority by a contract between them.
It also states that, notwithstanding any restrictions,
an act done by a partner on behalf of the firm, which falls within his implied
authority, binds the firm. However, such an act could not so bind the firm, if
the third party knows of the existence of the restriction mentioned above.
In other words, the emphasis of Section 20 is that no
third party should suffer on account of his ignorance of the existence of a restriction
on the partner’s implied authority.
However, under emergent conditions, Section 22
empowers a partner to do all such acts which are essential for the purpose of protecting
the firm from loss, as a person of ordinary prudence would be doing under
similar circumstances, irrespective of having implied authority or not.
Further, a partner being an agent of the firm, any
admission or representation concerning the firm made by him, creates valid evidence
against the firm (Section 23). Similarly, notice to a partner,of any matter relating to the affairs of the firm,
operates as a notice to the firm. However, for creation of the mortgage by
deposit of the title deeds, all partners shall have to deposit the title deeds
with an intention to secure the debt.
Box 6:
Bank Accounts of Firm – Operating Instructions
To ease itself from the onerous
responsibility of establishing implied authority and other related details,
banks often prefer to get the documents such as account opening forms and
loan documents, signed by all the partners. Secondly, they also prefer to get
the delegation/empowerment of any one partner to operate the bank accounts
explicitly recorded and authorised by all the partners concerned.
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