123 S.W. 1029 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1909
(1) Actions of this character are barred unless commenced within five years after the cause of action accrued. R. S. 1899, sec. 4273; Thomas v. Hurst, 73 Fed. 372; Bonney v. Stoughton,
C. V. Buckley and R. M. Sheppard for respondent.
(1) A partner, while the partnership exists, cannot neglect to perform a duty or obligation required to be done by the partnership and then take advantage thereof, and forfeit the rights of his copartners. 30 Cyc. 438; Mitchell v. Reed, 19 Amer. Rep. 252. (2) Notice that a partner's share has been forfeited does not dissolve the partnership. Hart v. Clarke, 6 De G. Mc. N. G. 232; 2 Lindley on Partnership, 952. (3) While the partnership relation continues, each partner is bound to act with utmost good faith toward his copartners. And if he purchase property for his individual benefit, or take a lease on it when the firm is entitled to the advantages of such purchase or lease, or secures a valuable contract for himself, he will be treated as trustee for the firm. 30 Cyc., p. 458; Perry on Trusts, 427; Jones v. Dexter, 39 Amer. Rep. 459; Mitchell v. Reed, 19 Amer. Rep. 252; Freeman v. Moffett,
STATEMENT. — This is an action for a partnership accounting. Trial was had, judgment for plaintiff, and defendants have appealed. The facts necessary to a determination of the questions involved in this appeal are as follows:
On June the 5th, 1895, Patrick Murphy, who was the owner of the land, leased to himself, this plaintiff, James Murphy, and others, a tract of land in Cherokee county, Kansas, for mining purposes for a period of ten years. The lease required mining operations to begin within thirty days and to be kept up continuously, unless prevented by unavoidable accident, for the term of the lease, and required the lessees to keep machinery on the land sufficient to operate the mines in a workmanlike manner. There were several other provisions, among which was one, providing that should the lessees fail to comply with any of the terms of the lease, that the lease should be forfeited. The parties began work on the land, expended considerable sums of money, did considerable drilling and some mining, but did not work continuously. They worked during the summer season, and, by mutual consent, suspended during the winter season. This continued until the spring of 1899. In the early spring of 1899 valuable ore was discovered on land adjoining and very near to this land with indications that the ore extended under the land covered by this lease. On May the 1st, 1899, James Murphy, having, in the meantime, acquired a one-half interest in the fee of the land with Patrick Murphy, who was his brother, the two Murphys, on that date, attempted to forfeit the lease by notifying this plaintiff, and the other parties, that their interest in the lease was forfeited; and the Murphys then refused to continue the mining operations with this plaintiff and other lessees, but soon thereafter leased the land to other parties and mining operations were conducted by them under which they paid to the Murphys a royalty of twenty per cent, and under this provision the Murphys received large sums *668 of money as such royalty. Under the lease by Murphy to the plaintiff and others, the royalty required to be paid was ten per cent. Plaintiff seeks by this action to recover his part of the extra ten per cent royalty received by the Murphys from May 1, 1899, to June 5, 1905, the date of the expiration of the original lease. Patrick Murphy died in the year 1900, testate. His estate was administered and finally closed in 1903, and, on distribution, his heirs and devisees received more than the amount of plaintiff's judgment. The defendants, who are heirs and devisces of Patrick Murphy plead the five-year Statute of Limitations, and also the administration statute. Defendant, James Murphy, pleads the five-year statutes of both Missouri and Kansas, and also the three-year statute of Kansas. The defense in this case is the statute of limitations, and unless that defense is available under the facts in this case, the plaintiff was entitled to recover and the judgment should be affirmed. In the investigation of this question, it becomes necessary in the outset to determine the nature and extent of the partnership existing between the grantees in the lease of June 5, 1895, and to determine whether it was a partnership for a fixed period of time or was merely a general partnership with no time fixed for its duration. It will be observed that there is no specific contract of partnership between the parties outside of the lease itself.
It is a well-settled rule of law that partnerships arise out of contract and are not implied, and whether or not a partnership exists depends upon the contract of the parties, and if there be no specific contract of partnership between the parties, a court will look to the entire transaction and from that, construed in the light of the surrounding circumstances determine what was the intention of the parties, and this intention will be the controlling factor in determining whether or not a partnership existed. [McDonald v. Matney,
Logically, then, the terms of the contract of partnership should be determined in the same way. In this case the partnership came about by the execution of the lease of June 5, 1895, which by its terms provided that it should continue for a period of ten years — with a provision for forfeiture — and bound the parties to mine the land continuously for that time; to keep sufficient machinery on the land to do the work and to work the mines in a workmanlike manner; to keep the shafts and drifts properly secured so as to prevent caving, and some other minor provisions, and to pay to Patrick Murphy a royalty of ten per cent of the value of the ore mined. The purpose of this partnership was to conduct a mining business upon the land leased, and the parties must have understood that the business was to continue during the life of the lease, and this made it a partnership contract for a definite period, to-wit: ten years. The mere fact that they had leased the land did not of itself make them partners. If that were all, they would be tenants in common, so that it was not the fact of the lease alone, but the terms and conditions of it and the uses to be made of the land that made them partners. This being true, the contract of partnership must be held to embrace the conditions of the lease, and to be co-extensive with it in all particulars, including the time it was to continue.
It is clear that parties engaging as partners to do a certain piece of work, as the erection of a building or digging a ditch, will be held to have agreed that the partnership should continue a sufficient length of time to enable them to complete the enterprise.
In this case they agreed, by the terms of the lease, to mine this land and pay royalties for ten years, and as they were partners in the enterprise, they must have intended that the partnership should continue during that time. *670
Having determined that this partnership was an agreed partnership for the term of ten years, we must next determine when the Statute of Limitations began to run against this plaintiff. It is conceded in this case that the attempted forfeiture by Murphys on May 1, 1899, was illegal, as they were themselves lessees as well as owners of the fee, and had, by their previous conduct, waived the right to declare a forfeiture. The contention of appellant is that while this attempted forfeiture, followed by the exclusion of plaintiff from a participation in the mining business on this land, did not ipso facto dissolve the partnership, it did start the Statute of Limitations to running from that date. In determining when the Statute of Limitations begins to run in cases of this character, a distinction should be drawn between the cases in which the partnership is a general one and no limit as to the time of its duration fixed, and those partnerships formed for a specific purpose or for a specified time. In the former, either partner may, in the absence of fraud, terminate it at will without incurring any liability and may do this by simply notifying the other partners of his intention. In the latter, some courts have held that a partner cannot terminate such a partnership at will, but the trend. of the authorities now is that it may be done, but if it is done without legal cause it will subject the wrong doer to liability for resulting damages. In the former case, the statute would begin to run at once upon notice of the dissolution. In the latter case, where the partnership is to run for a specific time and is dissolved, or attempted to be dissolved, priorto that time by the wrongful act of one partner, there may be equities existing between the partners that would have to be adjusted before the statute would begin to run. It has been held, and, we think, properly so, that the mere exclusion of one partner by the other partners from the business of the firm does not ipso facto dissolve the partnership but only furnishes ground for dissolution by a court of *671
equity upon the application of the partner excluded. In the case of Hartman v. Woehr,
It has been suggested on the part of the heirs and devisees of Patrick Murphy that he, having died October 12, 1900, and his estate having been administered, that his death dissolved the partnership and required an immediate accounting, and that the Statute of Limitations would begin to run from the date of his death. As a general proposition the death of one partner does dissolve the partnership, but even in those cases, the dissolution caused by death does not affect existing contracts. [30 Cyc. page 620; Hughes v. Gross,
Since this partnership had contracted to mine this land and pay royalties for ten years, its contract must be fulfilled. The Murphys being lessees and members of the partnership, their act in leasing the land to other parties was the act of the partnership and entitled the members of the partnership to the benefits of that lease and as, through them, the business of mining on this land had been transferred and was conducted by what is in legal effect a sublessee, and there was nothing left for this partnership to do but to receive and divide the profits, it would be inequitable to say that the death of one partner before the expiration of the time the partnership was to run, should deprive his estate and the other partners of their share of the profits for the unexpired term, and as plaintiff had the right and did elect to let the business proceed to the end of the term before asking for an accounting, and as Murphy had died and his estate had been finally settled prior to that time, *673 the doctrine that the death of one partner dissolves the partnership would not apply to the facts of this case. Judgment affirmed. All concur
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