Crosby v. Timolat

52 N.W. 526 | Minn. | 1892

This is an appeal by the defendant Stevens alone from an order overruling his demurrer to the complaint. It appears that Miller and Timolat were engaged as copartners in the business of buying and selling real estate. At the same time Stevens and the same Timolat were copartners in the enterprise of buying, holding, and selling certain specified tracts of land. That Miller and Timolat, as such copartners, and at the request of the defendants, Stevens and Timolat, as copartners, performed services in selling the land which was the subject of the partnership enterprise of the latter. After that, in an action prosecuted by Miller against Timolat, this plaintiff was appointed receiver of the partnership property of the firm of Miller Timolat, with power to sue for and collect all debts due to that partnership. He prosecutes this action to recover the value of such services rendered for the defendants.

The appellant relies upon the technical rules of the common law. It is true that an action at law for such a cause as that stated in the complaint could not have been maintained by a partnership against another partnership having a common member with the former firm. It was not permitted that one of the parties should thus appear both as a plaintiff and defendant, in effect prosecuting an action against himself, in which, if a recovery were to be allowed, it would be in *174 his favor, and at the same time against himself. Nor, at law, would the contract or agreement between the two firms having a common member be recognized as creating a legal obligation or cause of action. The transaction would be treated as an attempt by a party to enter into a contract with himself. Bosanquet v. Wray, 6 Taunt. 597; De Tastet v.Shaw, 1 Barn. Ald. 664, 669; Leake, Cont. 439, 440; McFadden v.Hunt, 5 Watts S. 468; Price v. Spencer, 7 Phila. 178. The remedial system of the common law was too inflexible and restricted to enable it to adjust the complex rights and obligations of the parties under such circumstances.

But in equity the agreements of the members of firms so related to each other were treated as obligatory, and the fact that one of the parties to the joint contract stood in the position of both an obligor and obligee did not stand in the way of affording such relief or remedy as might be found to be appropriate and necessary to the ends of justice. 1 Story, Eq. Jur. §§ 679, 680; Haven v. Wakefield, 39 Ill. 509;Chapman v. Evans, 44 Miss. 113; Calvit's Ex'rs v. Markham, 3 How. (Miss.) 343; Hayes v. Bement, 3 Sandf. 394.

With the statement of these propositions the objections to the sufficiency of the complaint upon the grounds stated in the demurrer are overcome. There is a cause of action stated of an equitable nature, if not legal, — and if it is either the demurrer cannot be sustained, — and the plaintiff has legal capacity to sue. The very objections which the appellant urges to the sufficiency of the complaint as setting forth a legal cause of action go to show that relief should be afforded in equity at least. If the fact that Timolat is one of the obligors in the contract as well as an obligee renders necessary any apportionment of the amount to be recovered, or any equitable adjustment of the rights of the parties, the court is competent to do what is necessary. At present the question is not how the matter is to be adjusted, or what recovery shall be allowed, but only as to whether the action can be maintained at all. As bearing upon this question may be cited, in addition to the authorities above referred to, Cole v. Reynolds, 18 N. Y. 74;Schnaier v. Schmidt, (Sup.) 13 N. Y. Supp. 725; Lathrop v. Knapp,37 Wis. 307; In re Buckhause, (Ex parte Flynn,) 2 Low. 331. *175

It is unnecessary to consider whether this plaintiff, as the receiver of the creditor partnership, could maintain a merely legal action against the members of the other firm.

Order affirmed.

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