Tully v. Felton
Tully v. Felton
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
By the terms of the agreement between these parties the plaintiff was interested in the transactions of the defendants under the contract, in the manner of a partner. The manufac
We have not the slightest hesitation in holding that the case was a proper one for equitable jurisdiction. Whether on the ground of discovery, which was absolutely necessary, or mistake, or complicated accounts, or community of interest in a common enterprise where all the accounts were in the hands of one of the parties, and the situation was one which involved a trust and confidence, it is perfectly clear that the only suitable and complete remedy was by a bill in equity. There is but little controversy on this subject. The serious matter of contention grows out of the long delay of the plaintiff and his repeated acts of acquiescence in the method of stating accounts pursued by the defendants. For sixteen years the plaintiff received semiannual statements from the defendants, purporting to state the cost of materials and labor, and dividing the resulting profits, of which he accepted his share without complaint. The learned court below dismissed the bill on this ground. In ordinary circumstances it would be sufficient.
The decree of the court below is reversed and the plaintiffs bill is reinstated at the cost of the appellees. And it is now ordered, adjudged and decreed that an account shall be taken of all the dealings and transactions between the complainant and the respondents under the agreement of 28th of February, 1871, and the supplemental agreements thereto.- It is ordered and decreed that the accounting heretofore made by the respondents is incorrect and untrue, in that they did without the knowledge of the complainant charge him improperly and erroneously with a higher price for materials than was just under said agreement; that they charged him with a greater cost of labor than was actually paid by them, and that the accounts between the complainant and respondents be opened and the respondents account de novo.
It is ordered that the respondents shall account for all their receipts under said agreements; that in said account they shall be allowed a credit for materials furnished, not at the wholesale selling price of such materials as established by their sales to others, but at the usual wholesale selling price of said materials in the market at the time of furnishing the same; that they shall be allowed a credit only for the actual cost of the labor furnished and done by them in the manufacturing of articles under said agreement, and that when the balance is ascertained due to the complainant upon the taking said account they shall pay over the same to the plaintiff with interest and costs.
It is ordered that this account shall be taken before D. Webster Dougherty, Esq., of Philadelphia; and that he shall take all testimony necessary thereunder; and that he shall report to the court said account thus taken and the balance due to the plaintiff thereunder. The record is remitted to the court below in order that this decree may be carried into effect.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- John W. Tully v. Samuel K. Felton, Conrad F. Rau and Edward A. Sibley, Copartners, trading as Felton, Rau & Sibley
- Cited By
- 9 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Contract — Accounts—Laches—Statute of limitations — Equity. Plaintiff, the owner of a patent paint filler, entered into an agreement in writing with defendants by which the latter were to manufacture the paint filler in accordance with instructions given by the plaintiff. Defendants were to furnish all the capital necessary to carry on the manufacture. The agreement provided “that all the net profits arising from the direct sales of said patent paint filler made by said party of the second part, or by their traveling salesmen shall accrue to the benefit and advantage of the said party of the first part in the same proportion as though sold directly by the said party of the first part.” By another clause of the contract it was stipulated that the plaintiff should give to the defendants “one third of the net profits arising from the entire sale of the paint filler.” The sales were made by the defendants. It was also provided “the cost of manufacture to be estimated by the wholesale price of the materials and packages used, and the amount of labor bestowed in its manufacture.” The parties acted under the contract for sixteen years, and semiannual accounts were furnished to plaintiff, which he accepted without objection. The cost of manufacture was arrived at by ascertaining the value of the materials used by the prices received for the same from wholesale customers to whom defendants sold, estimating the labor required in the preparation of the product as compared with the whole of the product belonging to the joint account and adding the cost of packages, but no detailed accounts of the materials and labor were kept. In the sixteenth year a controversy arose as to the meaning of the word “ wholesale,” and the plaintiff', after learning that the defendants had charged him an advance on the price of different materials purchased from others, demanded a detailed account for the previous year of the cost of manufacture. He received two statements of account which were unsatisfactory. He also received two semiannual statements. After these four statements were made plaintiff filed his bill. Held, (1) that the plaintiff had such a direct interest in the subject of the cost of manufacture that he was entitled to have full and accurate accounts kept of the cost of manufacture; (2) that the contract did not contemplate that the cost of materials and labor was to be merely a matter of estimate without any reference to the actual cost; (3) that the plaintiff had a standing in equity to demand a full accounting for the whole period during which the contract ran; (4) that under the circumstances of the case the plaintiff was not barred by his own laches or the statute of limitations; (5) that the last four statements submitted to him did not constitute an account stated by which the plaintiff was bound so that the account could not be opened; (6) that in a proper accounting defendants should be allowed a credit for materials furnished, not at the wholesale selling price of such materials as established by their sales to others, but at the usual wholesale selling price of said materials in the market at the time of furnishing the same, and they should be allowed a credit only for the actual cost of the labor furnished and done by them.