165 Mass. 230 | Mass. | 1896
These are actions for money had and received, brought by two tenants in common against a third, to recover their share of the net profits realized by the defendant in carrying on a garden farm. We assume without deciding, as the plaintiffs contend, that the actions are maintainable in Massachusetts in this form, and that the items on their side of the account stated by the auditor are all properly there. St. 4 & 5 Anne, c. 16, § 27. Jones v. Harraden, 9 Mass. 540 n. Shepard v. Richards, 2 Gray, 424, 427, 428. The only questions necessary to be considered are whether, as a matter of substantive law, or at least under the answer, which was a general denial, the defendant should
The question of pleading raises no difficulty. It is true that this is not a mutual account by contract between the parties, as in Goldthwait v. Day, 149 Mass. 185, but the principle is the same. The plaintiff has to prove, in the language of the statute, that the defendant has received “ more than comes to his just share or proportion,” and that can be determined only after making the defendant all just allowances. Shepard v. Richards, 2 Gray, 424, 427.
We are of opinion, further, that the substantive law does not forbid the allowances in question. It is true that there is no contract between the parties. We assume that the defendant could not have recovered for any part of his services if he had been the plaintiff. But when he is asked to account, it is plain that justice may require an allowance for the labor which he has contributed, for the same reasons on which it is admitted that he should be allowed for cash paid out. If the former item is excluded, it is by an arbitrary rule. No such rule is found in the words of the statute. On the contrary, the words “ just share ” would imply that his share is to be determined by justice, not by a fiction or a technicality. In this Commonwealth it now is settled, that even in the case of a surviving partner continuing to subject the assets of the firm to the perils of business, there is no inflexible rule against allowing him for his services if the representatives of the deceased partner elect to take a share of the profits. Robinson v. Simmons, 146 Mass. 167, 176. A fortiori is this true in the case of a cotenancy of land, where one tenant by his labor has realized the proceeds in which the others claim a share. The same principle applies to the allowance for animals and utensils. Shepard v. Richards, 2 Gray, 424, 427. Ruffners v. Lewis, 7 Leigh, 720, 738, 743, 744. Gayle v. Johnston, 80 Ala. 395, 401, 402. The construction of the statute in England seems to be in accordance with our views. Henderson v. Eason, 17 Q. B. 701, 720, 721.
If the foregoing allowances are made, the shares of the profits coming to the plaintiffs are less than their respective shares of
Looking at the substantive question of policy involved, a majority of the court do not think that it would be just to lay down an absolute rule of law that the expenditures should be marshalled so that the taxes should be paid first out of gross profits, and the balance only applied to the defendant’s labor, etc. This would put a cotenant who had made an honest effort to improve the property at a disadvantage as compared with one who simply had let it lie fallow. In the latter case the claim for taxes would be indisputable. It seems unfair to say that one who tries to make a gain in which all will share if he succeeds, necessarily shall be in a worse position unless he succeeds.
¡Exceptions overruled.