Indications of Partnership. At least six months before the 1996 Summer Olympic Games in Atlanta, Georgia, Stafford
Question:
Indications of Partnership. At least six months before the 1996 Summer Olympic Games in Atlanta, Georgia, Stafford Fontenot, Steve Turner, Mike Montelaro, Joe Sokol, and Doug Brinsmade agreed to sell Cajun food at the games and began making preparations. Calling themselves “Prairie Cajun Seafood Catering of Louisiana,” on May 19 the group applied for a license with the Fulton County, Georgia, Department of Public Health–Environmental Health Services. Later, Ted Norris sold a mobile kitchen for an $8,000 check drawn on the “Prairie Cajun Seafood Catering of Louisiana” account and two promissory notes, one for $12,000 and the other for $20,000. The notes, which were dated June 12, listed only Fontenot “d/b/a Prairie Cajun Seafood” as the maker (d/b/a is an abbreviation for “doing business as”). On July 31, Fontenot and his friends signed a partnership agreement, which listed specifi c percentages of profi ts and losses. They drove the mobile kitchen to Atlanta, but business was “disastrous.” When the notes were not paid, Norris fi led a suit in a Louisiana state court against Fontenot, seeking payment. What are the elements of a partnership?
Was there a partnership among Fontenot and the others?
Who is liable on the notes? Explain. [Norris v. Fontenot, 867 So.2d 179 (La.App. 3 Cir. 2004)]
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