Roberts v. Herryford
Roberts v. Herryford
Opinion of the Court
— This is a suit in equity to settle a partnership account. The questions which are presented for our decision arise upon exceptions to the report of the referee to whom the case had been referred. The trial court confirmed that part of the report of the referee which allowed a charge of $3,600 made by the plaintiff for the services of his son in managing his railway eating-houses for the two years ■covered by the partnership between plaintiff and defendant. The defendant’s contention is that this item should have been disallowed plaintiff as a credit, and charged up on the debit side of the account, which would result in showing a profit on the eating-house business of that amount, the one half of which amount the defendant would be entitled under the terms of the partnership agreement.
From these provisions of the partnership agreement it does not appear either expressly or by necessary implication that the defendant was to have charge of the plaintiff’s eating-houses on the Mexican Central
It further appears from the evidence that at the date of the partnership agreement and for some time thereafter one Bunell was acting as manager for plaintiff of his eating-houses; that on July 5th, after the partnership agreement was entered into, the plaintiff wrote to the defendant a letter, in which he mentions, some complication in respect to one of his eating-house contracts and refers to BunelPs knowledge of the matter. In this letter he tells the defendant .to “please explain this matter to Ed, as I presume he will take charge of that business,” refering evidently to the railway eating-house business. If the plaintiff had employed his son to take charge of his eating-house business prior to the entering into the’ partnership with the defendant, it is easy enough to see why he wrote to the defenndant that he “presumed that Ed would take charge of the eating-house business.” And this is perfectly consistent with the provisions of the partnership agreement. If plaintiff did not under the partnership agreement give defendant control of the railway eating-house business, then it would appear that the partnership agreement, the letter and the testimony of the plaintiff and his son are entirely consistent and harmonious. And even if the partnership agreement as first written was modified
The contract of co-partnership was entered into in this state where both parties then resided. The plaintiff’s sons were then in charge of his grocery business at El Paso, and under the co-partnership agreement the defendant was to displace them. The co-partnership agreement was dated June 10th, though not signed till later on. On June 12th the plaintiff in answer to a letter of defendant dated June 11th states that: “I don’t see it as you do in regard to Ed and Ben. Of course I do not mean that we are compelled to employ them whether they work or not. I don’t want them employed unless agreeable to both you and them. I merely named it in the agreement so the boys would see that I had not foi’gotten them with you.”
We think the inference deducible from this' correspondence is that the plaintiff, who it appears wrote the partnership agreement, desired to make provision therein for the employment of his two sons by the partnership, and it was to this the defendant obiected.
What is stated by the plaintiff in his letter just referred to is fatal to the plaintiff’s claim that he had employed his son to take charge of his eating-house business before the entering into the partnership agreement. But if the plaintiff retained under the contract of partnership, as we think was the case, the control of his eating-house business, then he had the undoubted right at any time to employ his son or any other person to manage the same for him. There is nothing in the partnership agreement requiring plaintiff to give his personal attention to his eating-house business, nor that he should furnish his son or any one else to take charge of the same and manage it without cost to the partnership. It is an elementary principle of the law of partnership that when the question of profit is required to be determined that gratuitous payments to third persons which do not appear to have been beneficial to the business nor necessary or justifiable upon business principles will not be allowed as credits. 2 Lindly on Partnership, sec. 789; Bates on Partnership, sec. 767. It is quite conclusively shown by the evidence that the plaintiff’s eating-house business from its very nature and extent required frequent attention.
But as to the value of the service of one so attending it the testimony sharply conflicts. There is no evidence that the services of plaintiff’s son were without
As to the value of the services of the plaintiff’s son there is so much conflict and disagreement in the evidence that we feel authorized to defer to the finding of the trial court. Nelson v. Nelson, 41 Mo. App. 130; King v. King, 42 Mo. App. 454. And this last remark applies as well to every other issue of fact in the case which we have been called upon to decide.
We do not therefore feel warranted in interfering with the decree of the trial court, which will be affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.