Frankfort Construction Co. v. Meneely
Frankfort Construction Co. v. Meneely
Opinion of the Court
Appellee and appellant were partners in a joint undertaking for the construction of certain gravel roads in Clinton county, Indiana, and this action was brought by appellee on a complaint in two paragraphs, the first asking for an accounting from appellant; the second seeking to recover certain profits from the said undertaking, which it was alleged appellant had converted.
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Error is also assigned in the court’s conclusions of law on the facts found. In brief, these facts are that appellant and appellee were associated in the construction of certain gravel roads in 1909 and 1910, the agreement between them being a verbal one; that this verbal agreement was superseded by a written agreement in 1911, and settlement was made for the roads previously constructed; that this latter agreement provided for the construction by the parties of four roads for which appellant had contracts, and one for which appellee had the contract, four of which roads, including the latter, *517 were known collectively as the Fickle roads and' the other as the Barnett road; that appellee was to superintend or pay for superintending all the work and appellant was to furnish all money for expenses, each to share equally in profits; that appellant was to advance to appellee $2.50 per day for the time actually employed on the roads, this, as well as any other expenses paid out for superintending the work, to be deducted from appellee’s portion of the profits; that the contract should be null and void, except as to appellee’s right to a per diem, if he should refuse to perform his part of the agreement; that, if a road should be graded or graveled and he should be absent from the road or fail to superintend it in the proper manner, appellant was to employ a competent foreman or superintendent to super-. intend said road and charge the expenses to appellee. It was also found that appellee, according to the terms of his contract, superintended all the work done in the construction of three of the roads, and while- he was so -engaged, another of the Fickle roads was built and constructed under a superintendent other than appellee; that appellee complied with all the terms of the contract on his part as to the Fickle roads; that the Barnett road was included in the written contract, but appellee had no part in its construction, and is not entitled to any of the profits therefrom; that the profits on said Fickle roads were $2,419.07, of which sum appellee owned one-half; that there had been advanced to him $423.05, which should be deducted from his share of profits; that there was due him as his share of profits $786.48; that appellant refused on demand to pay his share of profits to appellee, and that it had appropriated to its own use the profits from said roads and claimed to be the owner of the same; that appellee converted and *518 appropriated to its own use, unlawfully and without right and to the appellant’s damage, his one-half share of the profits to the value of $786.48. Upon these facts the court stated as conclusions that the law is with the appellee, and that he is entitled to a judgment against appellant in the sum of $786.48.
Note. — Reported in 112 N. E. 244. Dissolution of partnership, destroyed confidence between partners as ground, 69 Am. St. 423; 30 Cyc 447, 657, 712.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- The Frankfort Construction Company v. Meneely.
- Cited By
- 3 cases
- Status
- Published