70 Md. 523 | Md. | 1889
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The decree of the Circuit Court of Baltimore City, from which this appeal was taken, establishes a partnership between the appellant and the appellee from the 1st day of July, 1885, to the 15th of May, 1881, and directs the auditor to state an account of the partnership business, and to allow the appellant seven and one-half per centum of the net earnings of the firm as his share thereof, and no more. The appellant who was plaintiff below, appeals from so much of the decree as limits his share of the earnings of the business to seven and one-half per centum. The appellee has not appealed from the decree establishing the partnership, which was denied in the pleadings and evidence of the appellee ; therefore the only question open in this Court is whether the Circuit Court properly fixed the appel
The appellant contends that, under the circumstances, the law presumes his interest was a moiety of the profits, and this he claims was erroneously denied him. There is little room for doubt as to what the law is in case there is no specific agreement as to interest, and there are no facts and circumstances enabling the Court to see what was the expectation and intention of the parties, and. from which a. contract as to shares can he inferred. The authorities are practically harmonious on that subject. In section 24 page 33 of Story on Partnership, (Gray’s Edition) the law is thus stated; In the absence of all precise stipulations between the partners as to their respective shares in profits and losses, and in the absence of all other controlling evidence and circumstances, the rule of the common law is that they are to share equally.” But this presumption is not an irresistible one. If the circumstances in any particular case show that the partners did not so intend, and must be fairly supposed to have intended the contrary, the presumption of law must yield to the presumption of fact. Ib., 34 and 35, and notes, where all the authorities are collected. It is a question of intention, and is to he determined by a consideration of all the facts and circumstances available for the construction of the contract. Parsons on Contracts, page 58.
The Court below in its opinion says: The Court has no doubt, from the evidence, that when the plain
We think the facts and circumstances, and preponderance of proof in the cause fully justified these conclusions of the Circuit Court, and the decree which was passed to carry them out.
The only direct testimony bearing upon the ques- • tion are the statements of the appellant, the appellee, Jacob G-ottschalk and Mr. Becker, the chief bookkeeper of the firm; and their testimony, to our mind, puts it beyond doubt that the appellant never expected one-half of the profits of the firm, and ought not to be allowed any more than the Circuit Court has awarded him. He was an Austrian, and had been in this country but a few months when he married the appellee’s daughter. He was employed as a travelling salesman for a bent wood furniture establishment in his own country, and he courted and married the appellee’s daughter with the plain design of improving his financial condition, and had he not “ hasted to be rich” by un
More than six months after the interview in August, 1886, with Mr. Gottschalk, viz., on 21st of March, 1881, the appellant wrote his father-in-law a letter, in which he says, (after writing of another matter,) “I also beg you to again arrange about my signature at the store. It is nothing as a matter of form, and I positively promise you that I shall not put my signature to any note. 1 have done so for the last nine months, ever since I found out that you did not approve it. In fact, I have for the last few months only signed about a half dozen checks, as I always, as you well know, stand back for Joe in everyway signing checks, and also in all other ways ; but I would not like, to be under Mr. Becker; all the clerks in the office know that I cannot sign any more, and even outsiders seem to be informed about it; naturally, that worries me a good deal, and. does not do-the business any good. By giving me the right to sign again, as before, you would show to people also that there is no more ill-feeling between us, while any arrangement that you are about making, as you recently informed me, would not be affected in the least. Very truly,” &c. This letter contains the most
Decree affirmed, and. cause remanded.