Anderson v. Osceola Mill & Elevator Co.
Anderson v. Osceola Mill & Elevator Co.
Opinion of the Court
The following opinion was filed May 31, 1913:
Erom June 6, 1906, until September 19, 1909, the plaintiff and one E. S. Solomonson were partners and as such partners conducted the business of a country store
On or about the 30th day of, July, 1909, Solomonson again was in default in his accounts with the defendant' Mill Company, and he again issued two checks of Solomonson & Anderson for $500 each to the Mill Company to apply in payment of his individual liability, without the knowledge of Anderson; but the Mill Company’s representative knew that these checks were paid from partnership funds. It also appears that on or about the 6th day of September, 1909, the Mill Company, with Solomonson’s consent, took possession of the store and partnership business and collected accounts and notes due to the firm to the amount of $767.99. The plaintiff knew nothing of these transactions at the time. Solomonson had also cashed grain checks for farmers with the firm’s money, amounting to $1,492.25, without either the defendant’s or the plaintiff’s knowledge.
On or about the 28th day of September, 1909, the firm of
In October, 1909, Solomonson assigned all of bis interest in and to the partnership assets to the plaintiff. On the 8th day of December, 1909, the trustee of the firm property assigned to the plaintiff the book accounts, claims, and causes of action belonging to the firm. the plaintiff before the commencement of this action paid all of the indebtedness of the said firm, amounting to $5,000.
On the 24th day of November, 1909, the Mill Company commenced an action in, the Polk county circuit court against the firm of Solomonson & Anderson to recover an alleged balance due it for goods, wares, and merchandise sold and delivered to the firm of the alleged value of $3,868.33 and for cash advanced to. the firm amounting to $133.12, and for moneys of the plaintiff which it alleged bad been used by the defendants in their partnership business, the amount whereof it could not then state, and demanded judgment for $1,408.74. In that action the defendants admitted having purchased of plaintiff goods, wares, and merchandise of the nature stated, but denied the amount thereof as stated in the Mill Company’s complaint, and alleged that the goods purchased bad been fully paid for. the defendants also denied that they bad taken or appropriated any of the Mill Company’s money or mingled any of it with the moneys of the firm. the defendants further denied that the firm acted as the agent in any manner for the Mill Company in conducting its business at Nye.
The issues raised by the pleadings did not present the questions as to what amounts Solomonson was in default to the Mill Company nor as to what' amount of the partnership funds the Mill Company bad received from him through the fraudulent appropriation thereof by Solomonson and the com
In the instant action the court again found all the essential facts in accord with the .foregoing showing the relationship of the partners; the insolvency of Solomonson and of the firm in September, 1909; Solomonson’s defaults in account with the Mill Company as its agent at Nye and the payment, by checks and otherwise, of bis individual liability to the Mill Company out of the funds and assets of the firm without the knowledge, consent, or approval of Anderson, and that the Mill Company’s agents bad knowledge that these firm funds and assets were so applied without' Anderson’s knowledge. The court also found that the plaintiff in the instant action {Anderson) and bis copartner, Solomonson, bad in their answer in the former action, wherein the Mill Company was plaintiff and Solomonson and Anderson, as copartners, were defendants, alleged the same matter as a defense wbicb Anderson alleges in bis complaint as bis cause of action, and that evidence thereof was adduced and the rights of the parties in respect thereto were litigated, and that the plaintiff participated in the active litigation of said action, and that judgment was rendered therein adjudicating the rights of all parties in respect thereto; and upon these grounds adjudged in this action that such former adjudication estopped the plaintiff in this action from recovering on any of the claims
The plaintiff assails this finding and conclusion of the trial court upon the ground that the issues in the former action by the Mill Company against Solomonson and bimself as co-partners did not include the causes of action contained in bis complaint in the instant action and that they were in no way considered, litigated, or adjudicated therein. An examination of the record of the former ease shows that the court’s action in striking out the referee’s findings to the effect that Solomonson, in collusion with the company’s agents, bad paid to the company large sums of the firm’s money in satisfaction of bis individual obligations arising out of bis defaults as agent for the Mill Company, was manifestly based on the ground that the pleadings in that action presented no issue to determine the questions involved as to Solomonson’s agency and bis liability under the contract with the Mill Company. An examination of the pleadings in that action shows that the ruling was correct. the facts as there found, that the firm bad no interest in nor received any benefit from or through such agency business, and that the cause of action alleged was to recover a balance due the Mill Company on its account for goods, wares, and merchandise sold and delivered and for money loaned and advanced to the firm, clearly indicate that no accounting of the transaction pertaining to Solomonson’s defaults and the fraudulent appropriation of the firm’s assets in payment thereof was embraced in the issues of that action. It is obvious that' the issues presented only the questions of the amount due on the Mill Company's account against the co-partnership and whether or not the account was paid. the findings and judgment also clearly indicate that the court so treated the case and adjudicated what was due the Mill Company on its account against the copartnership and dismissed the Mill Company’s complaint with costs, upon the ground that this account was fully paid. True, some evidence show
It is considered that the court erred in bolding that the record in the former action shows that the causes of action embraced in the instant action were there adjudicated. Under these circumstances the former judgment does not preclude the plaintiff in this action from enforcing the causes of action alleged in bis complaint against the defendant; and upon the facts shown by the evidence be is entitled to recover the amount specified in the third, fourth, fifth, and sixth findings of the court, with interest thereon from the commencement of this action, and bis costs. Moehlenpah v. Mayhew, 138 Wis. 561, 119 N. W. 826; Hardy v. Mills, 35 Wis. 141; Grunert v. Spalding, 104 Wis. 193, 80 N. W. 589.
By the Court. — Tbe judgment appealed from is reversed, and tbe cause remanded with directions to award judgment in tbe plaintiff’s favor as indicated in tbe opinion.
A motion for a rehearing was denied, with $25 costs, on October 7, 1913.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Anderson v. Osceola Mill & Elevator Company
- Status
- Published