132 Mo. 48 | Mo. | 1895
This case was before this court on a former occasion on defendant’s appeal (102 Mo. 158), to which reference may be had for a statement of its facts. The judgment of the court below was reversed and the cause remanded. Patrick Bambrick has since deceased, and the suit has been revived in the name of Rosa Bambrick, his administratrix.
After the case was remanded, the plaintiffs filed their sixth amended petition on which the trial was had, and in which it is alleged, “that said firm suffered a loss in doing said work of about $24,000; that Bambrick and Moraghan, and defendant Simms, were equal
The controlling question in this case is as to whether or not there was ever a settlement of the partnership accounts between Moraghan, Simms and Bambrick, on which there was found to be a certain ■sum due by him to them and a promise by Simms to pay them such sum.
It is well settled that one partner may sue another in an action at law where the transaction relates to but ■one single unadjusted matter growing out of the partnership transactions (Buckner v. Ries, 34 Mo. 357; Byrd v. Fox, 8 Mo. 574); but that is not the case with which we have to deal. Here, there was a partnership with respect to one enterprise it is true, to wit, for the purpose of constructing six sections of railroad, but out ■of which grew very many business transactions pertaining to different matters, such as usually grow out of and are connected with such ventures, including the respective amounts paid into the firm by each one of its. members, and as to whether the loss of several thousand dollars in cash, which the evidence tended to show was received by Moraghan at one time and not accounted for, was to be sustained by. him, individually,' or shared equally by the members of the firm.
After the work had been done, Mr. Glaze, the bookkeeper for Moraghan, Simms &¡ Bambrick, made out a statement of receipts and expenditures for work -done under their contract for the Chicago & Alton Railroad Company, to be taken by Simms and others to Chicago, and which they did take, with the view of
Bambrick testified on the first trial (and being dead his evidence given on that trial and preserved in the bill of exceptions was read on the last) that on the day Simms went to Chicago he borrowed $10 of him and he said, “there is a prospect that I never will be able to pay you back this, or the amount of the loss on the contract, my part of it, but, if ever I am able to pay it, I will pay every dollar of'the loss.” There was evidence tending to show that Simms had stated that he intended to pay Bambrick his part of the loss. After this statement was made out Bambrick paid out. several thousand dollars of his own individual funds in liquidation of the firm debts.
The statement does not purport to be a settlement, of the business of the firm, as between the members;, but is simply a statement of its receipts and expenditures.
It was held in Bambrick v. Simms, supra, that, “if Simms agreed to the entire statement, still it does not. follow that he then owed or now owes the plaintiffs the sum of ■ $8,023.17,” and only shows “that Simms agreed to pay his just proportion of the losses on an adjustment of the accounts between the partners, and that an accounting can not be avoided by declaring an account stated.”
The statement was not made out with the view of a settlement between the partners, but for the sole purpose of ascertaining the loss of the firm on their con
The evidence on the last trial was not materially ■different from what it was on the first, so far as appears from the facts stated in the opinion, and following the law as therein announced we affirm the judgment.