43 So. 141 | Ala. | 1907
Bill to Dissolve Partnership and for an Accounting.
1. Partnership; Contract; Communion of Profit and Loss. — Under a contract by which one party put $100.00 in to the business to be applied to certain indebtedness, both parties were to work together for the interest of the business, and the profits to be divided one-third to each party and one-third to go to the liquidation of certain debts, such parties were partners inter sese, although by the same contract one was regarded as the owner of the business and was to remain in control of the business until the formation of a corporation contemplated by the contract.
2. Same; Accounting; Dissolution; Receivers. — The allegations of the bill that the defendant partner was insolvent, and that he had collected money due the firm which he had appropriated to his own use without making entry thereof on the partnership books, and without acquainting his partner of the facts, *97 are sufficient when supported by proof to warrant a decree of dissolution and the appointment of a receiver.
3. Same: Title to Partnership Property. — The fact that under the contract of partnership the respondent partner has the legal title to the partnership property, is no obstacle to the appointment of a receiver, when such partner has converted profits to his own use in which complainant partner had an interest and to which such complainant partner had contributed money.
4. Receivers; Premature Appointment; Objections; Waiver. — Although defendant partner submitted demurrers to the application for a receiver and filed affidavits against the appointment and thereafter appealed to the chancellor from the order of the register appointing the receiver, he waived his right to insist that the appointment was premature, because appointed by the register before answer filed, when he filed his answer before the chancellor as part of the proofs against the application, on appeal to the chancellor.
Whether complainant and Brooke are partners inter sese must be determined by their intention, as the same is expressed in or may be gather from the written agreement entered into by them, a copy *101
of which is made a part of the bill. — Pollard v. Stanton,
It is insisted, however, that the contract only shows that the formation of a corporation at some future day was contemplated by the parties. It is true the contract provides for the formation of a corporation after the debts of the business shall have been paid; but to say that the contract does not, or that it was not the intention of the parties that it should fix their relations — their status towards each other — during their association together before the time for forming the corporation arrived, would be placing too narrow a construction on its terms. We cannot conclude that it was the intention of the parties that while working together in the business to acquire money with which to pay off the debts, their status should be undefined. Our conclusion is that the parties to the contract are partners inter sese.
The remaining question is, do the bill and affidavits support the appointment of the receiver? As is said in Bard v. Bingham,
But it is insisted that the legal title to the plant is in Brooke; that he is in possession, and for these reasons a receiver should not be appointed. Granting that the contract provides that he is the editor and proprietor, and that he is to remain in control until the corporation is formed, yet the complainant paid into the business $100, and if the respondent without complainant's consent converted to his own use profits in which complainant has an interest, and which should have been applied to the payment of the debts, it cannot be doubted that complainant under the contract has an equitable interest in the plant, and none but a court of equity can adjust such an equity; and, this being true, the fact that respondent has the legal title of itself presents no obstacle to the appointment of a receiver. — Beach on Receivers, § 619.
The respondent appeared at the hearing, and submitted demurrers to the application for a receiver and objections to the application being heard. He also submitted affidavits against the granting of the application. From the register's appointment of the receiver he appealed to the chancellor, and on the hearing before the chancellor he lodged with the chancellor his answer to the bill as a part of his proofs against the application for a receiver. So the insistence that the receiver was prematurely appointed, because appointed by the register before answer to the bill was filed, if tenable in the outset, lost its efficacy by the filing of the answer and lodging it with the chancellor, to be considered along with the affidavits submitted to him. — Weis v.Goetter,
We have found no error in the record, and the decree of the chancellor overruling the motion to dismiss the bill for want of equity and appointing the receiver are affirmed.
Affirmed.
TYSON, C. J., and HARALSON and SIMPSON, JJ., concur.
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