Fleming v. Carson

62 P. 374 | Or. | 1900

Per Curiam .

1. It is not sought by the appeal to disturb the findings of the court below in so far as they pertain to the accounting, and the amount found and decreed to be due the plaintiff from the defendant in pursuance thereof; but it is urged that the lower court erred— firs.t, in appointing the receiver; second, in decreeing the sale of the partnership property and a division of the proceeds ; and, third, in allowing costs against the defendant. The appointment of a receiver rests within the sound discretion of the court, but such discretion is judicial in character, and subject to review on appeal. Generally speaking, the exigencies justifying the appointment are that the plaintiff is reasonably certain to prevail, and that' it is necessary to the preservation of the property involved, and the protection of the rights of all parties as their interests may appear upon the final adjudication. The rule is applicable as well where it concerns partnership matters, each partner ordinarily having an equal right to a voice in the management of the concern and in controlling the funds and assets. It has been judicially determined that, when a dissolution has taken place, and the members of the firm cannot agree upon an adjustment, a situation exists furnishing grounds for the appointment of a receiver: Smith, Rec. §§ 191, 205 ; Law v. Ford, 2 Paige, 310 ; Whitman v. Robinson, 21 Md. 30. The issue is involved in the case at bar, and is sufficient, if the evidence warranted it, to support the appointment. As the evidence is not here, however, we cannot consider it, and must, therefore, presume that it was also sufficient.

2. It is further suggested in this connection that the findings of the court upon the final hearing do not show that any cause existed for the appointment; but the question of the propriety of having a receiver does not appear to have been again presented at that time, and it *255is sufficient if the order of appointment is justified by the consideration of the court at the time it was made.

3. It is further insisted that, as the defendant proffered a bond to meet the approval of the court for the satisfaction of any decree that might be rendered in favor of the plaintiff, the court ought not to have made the appointment. In some instances such an undertaking will obviate and relieve the necessity for a receiver (Buchanan v. Comstock, 57 Barb. 568 ; Saverios v. Levy, 1 N. Y. St. Rep. 758: Popper v. Scheider, 7 Abb. Prac. [N. S.] 56); but in the present instance the defendant is in possession of the property, while the plaintiff has an equal right thereto pending adjustment, and, the court having passed upon the propriety of the appointment, we cannot assume to disturb its action in the absence of the proofs upon which its judgment was based.

4. The receiver was authorized to direct a sale of the property, consisting of law books, bookcases, files, office furniture, and fixtures. The suit being for an accounting and a winding up of the copartnership affairs, either party could have insisted upon a sale; but, in any event, it seems to be the approved method for settling claims against the firm, cross demands of the copartners, and finally adjusting the affairs of the concern: 17 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law (1 ed.), 1296.

5. As it pertains to the allowance of costs, that is also a matter of discretion for the lower court; not arbitrarily, but judicially, exercised. As a general rule, in cases of this kind, the costs should be charged to the fund, either where the suit is necessary or beneficial to both parties, or where both are in fault; and maybe imposed upon one party only, as a punishment, if he has been guilty of misconduct rendering necessary a resort to legal proceedings : 17 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law (1 ed.), 1295. We have recourse to the findings of the court *256below only for a determination of the question, the evidence not having been brought up. They should support the decree ; but there is nothing contained therein which tends in any manner to show that the defendant has been guilty of misconduct, or has done any act to warrant the allowance of costs against him as a punishment. From all tha¿t appears, the costs of this litigation have been incurred as a necessary expense in closing up the concerns of the copartnership, and should, therefore, be paid out of the copartnership assets: Caldwell v. Leiber, 7 Paige, 483, 508; Gyger’s Appeal, 62 Pa. St. 73, 81 (1 Am. Rep. 382). The decree of the court below will therefore be modified so as to require the payment of costs out of the funds of the copartnership, and the costs attending the appeal will be adjusted by the same standard. . Modified.

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