Montgomery v. Montgomery
Montgomery v. Montgomery
Opinion of the Court
In the view which we have taken of this case, it will only be necessary to consider, whether the complainant’s claim is barred by the statute of limitations.
It is perfectly obvious that, so long as a partnership continues, the possession of one is the possession of both, and consequently the statute of limitations cannot be interposed by either. So soon as the partnership is dissolved, this joint tenancy is ended, and the partners then stand as other individuals in society, each claiming for himself. At the dissolution a new relation may be, as was in this case, created between them. If one undertakes- to collect the partnership funds and account to his co-partner for his share, this creates a direct trust, and so long as it continues the statute could not be a bar. But whenever it is ended by an account and actual division of the partnership funds, as far as the collecting partner admits them to be so, this is an end of the trust; and as to any matters which one claims and the other denies to be his right, the statute then begins to run. Starke vs. Starke, (3 Rich., 438,) Moore vs. Porcher, (Bail. Eq., 195.)
On the 25th Dec., 1817, the copartnership between the complainant and defendant was dissolved. The defendant undertook to collect the funds of the copartnership, and continued to do so until Dec., 1819, at which time a division of the partnership effects took place. The whole concern was then settled, except the two items which are now in dispute, and of which the complainant insisted he was entitled to the one-half, and which the defendant denied.-' In 1817 the relation of partners ceased between them, and the defendant for the complainant’s moiety, became his trustee. In December, 1819, this trust was ended, and each stood in his own right, the one claiming and the other denying a right to participate in a specific fund. From this time the statute of limitations commenced to run in favor of the defendant. It is, however, said that the statute can have no application to accounts between merchant and merchant, and that this is a case of that kind. I have always understood
The defendant, in his proposition to arbitrate, in his conversations about the dispute between himself and his brother, and in his letter of the 10th September, 1823, uniformly denies that there was any mistake in the entries complained of, or that he was, in that respect, at all indebted to the complainant. None of these are, therefore, sufficient to prevent the operation of the statute, which had run out more than two years before the filing of the bill.
I regret that between brothers, and two honorable and just men, it should have been thought necessary by one of them to rely on this legal defence, more especially when, from the examination which the cases have received on the Circuit, I am satisfied that the justice of it is with the complainant. But it is our duty to shut our eyes to all the facts, except such as relate to the statute of limitations, and being satisfied that they are not enough to prevent its operation, we are bound to allow to the defendant the protection of its bar. It is. therefore, ordered and decreed, that the Circuit decrees be reversed, and the complainant’s bill be dismissed without costs.
Decrees reversed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.