122 Misc. 7 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1923
The plaintiffs and the defendant are members of one family and prior to June, 1919, they were partners in a successful business in the city of New York. The principal part of their business seems to have been the purchase of cotton goods “ in the grey ” and then having these goods finished or “ converted ” into dress goods for resale. They employed a number of mills or factories for this work but a very large proportion of the goods was converted by the Montville Finishing Company, a corpora, io i formed by themselves together with one William R. Booth and John J. Healion who were active officers in the corporation. This company had $24,000 capital stock of which one hundred and sixty shares were owned by the parties hereto and forty shares each by Booth and Healion. The parties hereto had prior to June, 1919, also advanced to the corporation the sum of about $205,000, for which the corporation was still indebted to them. In June, 1919, the parties hereto had a bitter quarrel and it was agreed expressly or impliedly that their copartnership must be promptly terminated and it was apparently understood from the start that after the dissolution of the partnership the plaintiffs would continue to do business together probably under the old firm name and that the defendant would be excluded from the new copartnership. Undoubtedly from the time of the quarrel the copartnership was carried on with a view of facilitating the dissolution and for months no new cotton goods were bought in the grey to be converted into dress goods. During the summer and early autumn there were many conferences held to determine the exact basis for a dissolution and on October twenty-fifth and twenty-seventh the parties entered into agreements which together provide all the terms for an immediate dissolution of the copartnership and after that date the plaintiffs in accordance with the terms of these agreements have carried on the business under the old firm name. One of the points that was discussed at length dining the negotiations leading up to the making of the formal agreements was the disposition of the shares of stock of the Montville Finishing Corporation and it was agreed that this stock should be divided among the parties in the proportion of their interest in the copartnership, viz., seventy-one per cent and twenty-nine per cent, so that the plaintiffs received one hundred and thirteen shares of stock and the defendant forty-seven shares. The indebtedness of the corporation to the copartnership was
These facts are substantially undisputed and in the absence of other circumstances which might show a consent express or implied by the plaintiffs to the purchase made by the defendant or which might exempt the defendant from the ordinary duty of one copartner to disclose to his copartner any matter which concerns the partnership and which precludes one partner from acting for himself individually without the consent of his copartners in any matter within the scope of the copartnership or materially affecting it, these facts lead in my opinion necessarily to the conclusion that equity should regard the defendant as merely a trustee even though against his will for the copartnership. The rule that a partner owes a duty of absolute good faith to his copartners and may not act individually for himself in a manner affecting their common interest is not merely a technical rule of partnership but is based upon sound common sense and the ordinary rules of fair dealing. I am of the opinion that technically the copartnership was not dissolved at the time of the quarrel but continued in existence until the formal agreement of dissolution but I cannot see that the plaintiffs’ rights or the defendant’s duty would be affected by a decision of this technical point. The interest of the parties in the Montville Finishing Corporation was
The defendant urges that he did not purchase the stock to obtain an advantage over bis copartners but merely to protect himself against a justified apprehension that they would take advantage of him. I am unwilling to hold that the defendant has been guilty of any intention of bad faith for he impressed me as an honest man. Family partnership quarrels may engender bitterness which blind men to what they would otherwise recognize as fair dealing but whatever may have been the apprehensions of the defendant or the basis for such apprehension, he could not accept on dissolution a pro rata share of one of the assets of the partnership and retain property which he had bought without the plaintiffs’ knowledge and which rendered the partnership property as a whole more valuable and rendered the part which the plaintiffs received less valuable.
So far I have considered only the question as if the undisputed facts stood alone, but the defendant asserts and the plaintiffs deny that prior to the purchase of the additional shares of stock by the defendant, the plaintiffs had refused to place all the stock owned by the copartnership into a voting trust so that the defendant’s
The defendant further urges that the plaintiffs made agreements with salesmen before the dissolution contracts were agreed upon by which they retained the services of such salesmen after dissolution. While the plaintiffs deny the making of these contracts, the defendant’s contention is strongly supported by various circumstances and I am ready to find that such contracts were made. I do not think, however, that the making of such contracts in behalf of the plaintiffs constitutes either a defense or counterclaim to the action. The contracts were personal in their nature. They were to take effect only on the dissolution and even if they had been disclosed to the defendant they could not by their very nature have become partnership assets upon the dissolution. It was understood from the date of the quarrel that these plaintiffs would continue to do business after dissolution and I can find no bad faith in preparations made before hand to continue the business. The salesmen were informed of the impending dissolution and they were free to make contracts of employment with any of the parties and no contract so made could inure to the benefit of the other parties. These circumstances differentiate this case from
The most serious doubt which I have had in this case is whether or not Booth and Healion still have such an interest in the stock purchased by the defendant as to make them necessary parties to the action. It appears that at the time the stock was purchased the defendant agreed not to dispose of the stock until he had first offered it back to Booth and Healion at the same price he paid for it. Healion and Booth knew at the time they sold the stock to the defendant that the defendant was a partner of the plaintiffs and that a dissolution was imminent and they further knew that the plaintiffs were not to be informed of the purchase of stock from them. If the defendant is chargeable with bad faith in law, Healion and Booth are chargeable with entering into an agreement to do something which the law regards as wrong. By their contract of sale they divested themselves of legal title to the stock. From that time on their only right depended upon their contract with the defendant and could be enforced only by a suit for specific performance. If Healion and Booth were parties to the present action the only issue as to them would be whether or not equity would enforce the contract. If it did enforce the contract the court would be compelled to render a decree which would produce the anomalous result that though the court has decided that the defendant holds title to the stock in trust for the partnership and Healion and Booth when they sold the stock knew that the defendant could not rightfully hold the stock for his individual benefit, yet that the court cannot enforce this trust until the stock has been offered back to Healion and Booth who could then resell to the defendant and thereby place the defendant in exactly the same position as if the decree had been in his favor. Equity is never powerless to right a wrong where the parties actually before it have legal title to the subject-matter and no innocent party is making any claim to the property involved. Booth and Healion would probably be proper parties to the action so that even their equitable claim to the stock could be adjudicated and proper provision made to protect any rights which they may have but they are not necessary parties under section 193 of the Civil Practice
Judgment accordingly.