25 N.Y.S. 1021 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1893
This action was brought to obtain an accounting upon the part of the members of the firm of Harris, Hughes & Co., in respect to their copartnership transactions. The defendants Harris and Hughes set up the defense of a release and a counterclaim against the plaintiff and their codefendant, Temple, seeking to recover damages because of a breach of the copartnership agreement. Upon the trial of the action the court found that the counterclaim was barred by the statute of limitations, and awarded judgment for an accounting, appointing a referee to take and state such accounts; and from such interlocutory judgment this appeal is taken.
Various points have been raised upon this appeal which it is not at all necessary to consider, in view of the conclusion at which we have arrived upon the question of the statute of limitations. The ground upon which the decision of the learned court below was placed in respect to this issue seems to have been that the counterclaim alleged in the answer was simply an action at law to recover damages for a breach of contract, and, as it did not occur within six years, the statute of limitations ran. In arriving at this conclusion, it seems to us the court failed to recognize the relations between the parties, and the true nature of the defense. It may possibly be that the defendants Harris and Hughes could not have maintained an action for damages against their copartners, unless the same was brought within six years from the time of the accruing of such cause of action; but when a claim is made against them, based upon the partnership agreement, there seems to be no reason why they may not offset against such claim damages arising to them by reason of a breach of the partnership agreements by the claimants in such an action. This action was brought to obtain a settlement of the partnership transactions of Harris, Hughes & Co., and such settlement must take place under the partnership agreement. Now, the defendants Harris and Hughes seek to recover damages by reason of a breach of the co-partnership agreement; and those defendants have the undoubted right to offset against any claim which may be established by the plaintiff under the agreement such damages as they have sustained by reason of the breach of such copartnership agreement by the plaintiff, as both causes of action arise out of the same transaction, viz. out of the partnership agreement. In this view, the facts set up as a counterclaim do not constitute an independent