73. Powers and Property of a Partnership. A partnership has the power to transact business in its firm name. Unless prohibited by statute, it may sue and be sued in its firm name, regardless of the names of the individual partners.

Each member of a partnership is regarded as an agent of all the other members of the partnership, with authority to bind the partnership by any contract made within the scope of the partnership business. A partner may deal individually in matters outside the scope of the partnership business. For example, A, B and C form a partnership for the purpose of buying, selling and leasing real estate. A, B and C are authorized to act for each other, in doing all the things reasonably connected with the transaction of real estate business. If A orders groceries in the firm name, his partners may deny and avoid the obligation, on the ground that is is not within the scope of the partnership affairs. The grocer selling A groceries in the firm name cannot claim that B and C authorized A to buy groceries. The purchase is clearly outside the real estate business. If, however, A purchases a house and lot in the firm name and uses it personally, the seller can hold the partnership for the purchase price. A partnership is empowered to sign notes, only when necessary to the transaction of the partnership business. Partnerships may hold the title to personal property in the name of the firm. This does not prevent the individual members from holding property individually at the same time. As between the partners themselves, only that personal property mutually agreed to belong to the partnership is partnership funds. Even as to third persons dealing with the partnership, the actual agreement of the individual members as to what is, and what is not partnership funds governs, except in the case of fraud. A partnership cannot represent that it owns certain property, or that certain purchases are made for the partnership for the purpose of obtaining credit, and then claim that it is owned by an individual member. Property purchased by partnership funds, or improved with partnership funds, belongs to the partnership. Real estate purchased with partnership funds is regarded as belonging to the firm, even though title is held in the name of one of the partners. The partner in whose name the property is held is said to be the legal owner, but the partnership is the equitable owner. Firm creditors may subject it to pay firm obligations.

74. Liability of Persons Held Out as Partners. If a person permits himself to be held out as a partner, he will be bound as a partner, as to third persons dealing with the partnership with this in view. It matters not that the party held out as a partner is not a partner in fact. The real relation will protect the apparent partner, as against the other partners, but not as against third parties who deal with the firm, relying upon his being a partner. What amounts to being held out as a partner is a question of fact, which must be determined by the circumstances surrounding each particular case. If A, without authority of B, tells C that B is his partner in the shoe business and that they are trading as the "A B Co.," and C sells them an order of shoes, without investigating whether B actually is a partner, B is not liable as a partner for the obligation. The authority to hold a person out as a partner must come from the partner so held out. It may come from his assent or his neglect in denying the relationship when he learns that he is being advertised as a partner. For example, suppose A borrows five hundred dollars ($500.00) of B and promises to give B a one-half interest in his grocery business, if B so desires, on condition that B spend his afternoons working in the store, and B, not considering himself a partner, permits C to tell third persons that he is a partner. As a result, B cannot deny partnership liability as against third persons who consider him a partner in dealing with the partnership.

75. Duties and Liabilities of Partners as to Each Other. The relation of partners to each other is a contract relation. Each partner must carry out the terms of the contract. Ordinarily, partnerships require the devotion of the entire time and attention of each partner to the partnership business. Partners are not permitted to engage in any business for themselves which will interfere with the partnership business, or take their time and attention away from the partnership business. Each partner owes that duty of fidelity to the other members of the partnership. A partner as an individual may deal with the firm, and may act as agent for others in dealing with the firm, if it is with the consent and knowledge of the other partners. A partner cannot sell his interest in the firm to another, and have the new partner take his place as a member of the partnership, without the consent of the other partners. In any event, the withdrawal of one partner and the substitution of another dissolves the old partnership and establishes a new partnership. One partner may assign or transfer his interest in a partnership but this dissolves the partnership, and gives the purchaser the right to his seller's interest in the funds of the partnership. It gives the purchaser no right to participate in the management of the business.

If by the terms of a partnership agreement, the partnership is to subsist for a specified length of time, and one partner withdraws or refuses to continue, he is liable in damages to the other partners, for breach of contract. If the partnership is organized without regard to any specified duration, a partner may withdraw at will, and thus dissolve the partnership. Partners must devote their entire time and attention to the business, unless the partnership agreement provides otherwise. Each partner is entitled to an equal share of the profits. If one partner deals unfairly with another, the latter cannot bring an ordinary suit at law for recovery of the amount due him, or for his damages, but he must bring a suit in equity, setting up the facts, and must demand an accounting. The court will then determine the rights of the partners. If a partnership is dissolved, and the partners expressly agree that a certain sum is owing by one partner to another, the latter may sue the former for this amount, in an ordinary action at law.

76. Liability of Partnership to Third Persons. A partnership is liable as such, upon its contracts to third persons. This means that the obligation is in the nature of a joint one against all the partners, and not a several one against the individual partners. There is an individual liability of each partner, called a liability of each partner in solido. This liability is discussed in this section under the title, "Liability of Individual Members of a Partnership." A third person, in commencing a suit against a partnership, must sue all the partners, or be subject to the risk of having the case dismissed at the objection of the one sued. All the property of a partnership may be subjected to the payment of partnership obligations.

77. Liability of Individual Members of a Partnership for Partnership Obligations. While a suit brought against one partner for a partnership debt may be dismissed if objected to by the partner sued, if not objected to, and judgment is taken, it may be enforced against the individual assets of the partner sued. In this event, in most jurisdictions, the other partners are discharged from liability. If the partnership is sued either in the partnership name, or in the name of all the individual partners, the individual members are still liable in solido for the debt. By in solido is meant, liable for the whole. If one partner is compelled to pay all or more than his proportion of a partnership debt, he may recover the excess of his share, ratably from the other partners.

A member of a partnership may have partnership assets and individual assets. A creditor of the partnership may satisfy his claim out of the firm assets, or out of a partner's individual assets, except where there are individual creditors. In the latter event, the partnership creditors cannot subject individual partners assets to the disadvantage of the individual creditors. On the other hand, individual creditors cannot subject a partner's share in the partnership assets to the disadvantage of partnership creditors. This means that in case of insolvency of either a partner or of the partnership, firm creditors must first exhaust firm assets, and take the balance of individual assets after individual creditors have been satisfied. It means, further, that individual creditors must satisfy their debts out of individual partner's assets, and can only subject the balance of firm assets after firm creditors have been satisfied. If there are no partnership assets at all, and no solvent partners, firm creditors are treated on the same basis as individual creditors, and the individual assets of the partners are divided pro rata among partnership and individual creditors alike.

78. Change of Membership. A partnership depends for its existence upon the continuation of the same membership. If one partner withdraws, the partnership is, by that act, dissolved. If a new member is admitted, the partnership is dissolved and a new one created. A partner cannot escape his liability as a partner by withdrawing from the partnership. By this act, he terminates the partnership, and no further liabilities can be created against him except as to those persons having no notice of his withdrawal; but he is still liable for the old partnership debts. A substituted partner is not liable for the debts incurred before he enters the firm, unless he expressly assumes such debts. If he expressly assumes them, this does not relieve the outgoing partner from liability, unless this is assented to by partnership creditors. If it is borne in mind that a change in membership dissolves a partnership, and any partnership that exists thereafter is separate and distinct from the old one, and dates from the withdrawal of the retiring partner, or admission of the new partner, the individual liability of the partners is easily determined. For example, if A, B and C are partners in a dry goods business, and B withdraws, B is still personally liable for the debts of the A B C Co. The partnership ceases at the time of his withdrawal. If A sells his interest to D, who becomes a member with the consent of B and C, A is still liable to creditors who became creditors before A's withdrawal. D is not liable for the debts incurred before his admission as a partner, unless he expressly so agrees.