24 Ind. App. 2 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1900
The appellee, plaintiff below, sued James L. Hargis and James L. Bradley, as partners, as J. L. Hargis & 'Company. The complaint was in two paragraphs; the first on a promissory note executed by J. L. Hargis & Company to the appellee; the second was for money had and received to the use and benefit of the defendants, to pay off an indebtedness incurred in the operation and management of a large farm operated, as alleged, by the defendants as partners. Appellant filed his sworn answer to the complaint
The record shows that on the 3rd day of January, 1880, appellant, then and still the owner of the farm in Bartholomew county, near .Edinburg, mentioned in the second paragraph of the complaint, and then and still residing in the city of Indianapolis, entered into a written contract with James H. Hargis for the cultivation of the farm; that, under the contract, he (James H. Hargis) resided upon and cultivated the farm until 1890, when his son, J. L. Hargis, who for some time had acted as his father’s foreman, moved on the farm, his father moving off, and during the son’s occupancy and cultivation of the farm the alleged indebtedness accrued. The record shows that there was no contract for the occupancy or cultivation of the farm, written or oral, between appellant and James H. Hargis or J. L. Hargis, other than the written agreement with James H. Hargis. There is evidence that J. L. Hargis succeeded to the position and rights of his father, J. H. Hargis.
The second paragraph alleges a partnership between J. H. Hargis and the appellant. Counsel for appellee state in their brief that the court found that they were partners, and that the money was used in the discharge of indebtedness created for the benefit of the partnership. Appellee contends that the contract made the parties thereto a farm partnership. Appellant contends that it is a contract “to rent and farm let”, as declared therein, and does not create
It is claimed by counsel for appellee that these terms and stipulations of the agreement made the contract one of partnership, citing 17 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, p. 854; Brown v. Higginbotham, 5 Leigh 583, 27 Am. Dec. 618; Champion v. Bostwick, 18 Wend. 173; Pettee v. Appleton, 114 Mass. 114; Foughner v. Bank, etc., 141 Ill. 124, 30 N. E. 442; Bank v. Butler, 149 Ill. 575, 36 N. E. 1000. As appears from the brief of appellee, the cause was tried and decided upon the theory that Hargis and appellant were partners.
In the construction of a contract, we look to the intention of the parties. As said in George on Part., p. 31: “But it is the legal, rather than, the declared, intention that controls. If the parties intend and do those things which the law declares constitute a partnership, then the parties are partners; and an express stipulation that they do not intend to form a partnership is of no avail. It simply shows that they have mistaken the legal effect of the agreement which they intended to make.” The fact of partnership, in the case before us, depends entirely upon the written agreement. To copy it in full would unduly extend the length of this opinion. Erom an examination of its terms, we think it quite clear that the parties did not intend to form a partnership.
The contract provides for the purchase by the party of the second part of a one-third interest in the personal property on the farm. The remaining two-thirds interest was reserved in the party of the first part. This created a tenancy in common. It provides for the sale of the farm property on hand when the contract was entered into by “the mutual consent and agreement of the parties.” The
In Roper v. Schaefer, 35 Mo. App. 30, in which numerous authorities are cited, the rule stated in an instruction, as follows, was approved: “The court declares the law to be that a simple participation in the profits and losses of a business does not constitute a partnership, but there must be such a community of interests as enables each party to make contracts, manage the business and dispose of the whole property; and this rule is the same as to third persons, unless the party sought to be charged has so acted as to lead the plaintiff to believe a partnership to exist and to act upon such belief.” The contract in question provides that the party of the second part will cultivate all the farming land thereon in such crops and in such proportions as the parties may agree upon from year to year; that he will plow and gather in good season or order, circumstances permitting, and put in a crib or garner; and the parties are to sell the product of said farm at such prices as said parties may agree upon from time to time. “The said party of the second part to have charge of said farm and to take full power to make all necessary purchases for said farm, and to buy and sell such stock and for such price as may he mutually agreed upon. The party of the second part to keep a complete and correct account of all purchases and sales of any kind and character pertaining to the management of said farm under this contract which shall be open to the inspection of both parties.” These provisions are consistent with the theory of tenancy, and with the foremanship of the party of the second part, and inconsistent with the theory of partnership, because the right of a partner to inspect the hooks is an incident of partnership not dependent upon contract. The party of the first part is to have two-thirds of the price of all articles sold from said farm, and the party of the second part, one-third thereof. The agreement stipulates that the party of the second part shall not he required to replace buildings destroyed by fire.
We are unable to agree with the learned trial court in the conclusion reached. We are of the opinion that the intention of the parties, gathered from the instrument, was not to enter into a partnership, and that without reference to their intention, as gathered from the extracts we have made from the contract descriptive of the relation intended to be created, the instrument can not be construed as creating a partnership. The specific interest in the profits given to the tenant were in compensation for services rendered. It contains no provision inconsistent with this interpretation, while the theory of partnership is against the apparent intention of the parties. We have not found the question easy of solution. The conclusion reached can not be said to be sustained by “an unbroken line of authorities”, for in the reported- cases there is confusion as to the effect of stated facts. The construction, however, adopted bears the ultimate test as announced by approved authorities, and is in harmony with the general tenor of the instrument. We cite the following Indiana cases as in line with quotations from George on Part., supra, and Collyer on Part., supra: Macy v. Combs, 15 Ind. 469, 77 Am. Dec. 103; Stumph v. Bauer, 76 Ind. 157; Emmons v. Newman, 38 Ind. 372; Keiser v. State, 58 Ind. 379. In Macy v. Combs, supra, at p. 471, the court said: “That the parties to the agreement did not intend, as between themselves, to form a partnership, is clear; but there is much confusion, and not a little conflict, in the authorities, as to whether the facts, here detailed, should constitute them, in the eye of the law, partners, as to third persons; although they did not so intend. The agreement has apparently one of the marked characteristics which usually enter into a partnership, in, and including the
Judgment reversed, with instruction to sustain appellant’s motion for a new trial.