30 N.E. 442 | Ill. | 1892
On the 24th day of May, 1889, Peter R. McLeod made a voluntary assignment for the benefit of creditors, naming Anton Fougner, one of the appellants, as assignee, who duly qualified. The First National Bank of Chicago presented to the assignee a claim for $20,818.26, $15,000 of which was evidenced by a promissory note, made by said McLeod, payable to appellee Ferguson, and by him pledged to said bank after said assignment was made. The bank, it is admitted, holds said note subject to all defenses which might be made against it in the hands of said Ferguson. Appellee Ferguson also presented a claim for $3,298.93. To this claim, and so much of that of the bank as was evidenced by said promissory note, the appellants American Tube Iron Company and Northwestern Iron Metal Company and other creditors of the assignor objected The ground of the objection was that the moneys for which the claims were filed were advanced by said Ferguson to McLeod as a partner in the business concerning which the assignment was made. On a hearing in the county court of Cook county, the objections were overruled, and the claims duly allowed. That judgment has been affirmed in the appellate court of the first district, and hence this appeal.
WILKIN, J., (after stating the facts.) The only question presented by this record is, was appellee Ferguson a partner with McLeod in the business concerning which the assignment by the latter was made? If he was, it is admitted he cannot maintain a claim against the assigned estate. Neither can said bank, which stands in his place. The contention that they were partners is based, first, on the following agreement: "(1) Said Ferguson agrees to enter into the business now carried on at Nos. 345 and 347 South Canal street, in said city, by said McLeod and MacHugh, under the name of P. R. McLeod, to advance to said business, to be used therein, the sum of five thousand dollars; to take general charge of the office, finances, books, correspondence, accounts, sales, or other matters connected with the business. (2) As compensation for his services and the use of the money so advanced by him, he shall receive a salary at the rate of twenty-five dollars a week, and such a proportion of the net profits of said business as said sum of five thousand dollars shall bear to the total present net investment in said business. (3) In estimating *443 said profits, the salary of said Ferguson, and like salaries to said McLeod and MacHugh, being $25 per week each, shall be deducted, with the other expenses of carrying on said business, from the gross proceeds thereof; and no moneys other than said sum of $25 per week shall be drawn by either of said parties for private purposes. (4) This agreement shall last for one year from the date hereof, with the right to either of said parties to terminate the same at the end of the year, or at any time thereafter, by giving three months' notice in writing of the desire so to end the same: such notice to be given by the party desiring to terminate the agreement to each of the others; and in case of such determination said Ferguson shall be entitled to have repaid to him his said sum of five thousand dollars, and any further sums he may have advanced, and shall also receive his proper share of the net profits of the business at the time the agreement shall be so terminated." This contract is dated March 10, 1888. It purports to have been entered into by said McLeod and Ferguson and one Charles W. MacHugh, but the latter's relation to said business is not involved in this proceeding. It is admitted that the business mentioned in the first clause of this instrument is the same business in respect of which the assignment was made. Was the relationship of copartners created by the contract, or did Ferguson by its terms become the creditor and employee of McLeod? This, it is admitted, is to be determined by the intention of the parties, to be gathered from the instrument. It is generally said that, to constitute persons partners, they must share in the profits and losses. It is, however, well settled that it is not now necessary to show that there is an agreement to bear losses in order to make one liable as a partner. Sharing in the profits is the test. That, however, is also subject to the qualification that it must be a sharing in the profits, as distinguished from merely making the profits the measure of compensation for services or for the use of property or money in the business. The test of receiving profits is also subject to the further qualification that there must not only be a sharing in the profits, but it must be done as a principal, and not merely as an employee, or as interest on a loan of money, or for the use of property. This last qualification is founded on the case of Cox v. Hickman, 8 H. L. Cas. 268. In Holme v. Hammond, L. R. 7 Exch. 218, it is said the import of the opinions delivered in the house of lords in that case are correctly summarized by O'BRIEN, J., in Shaw v. Galt, 16 Ir. Com. Law, 375, thus: "The principle to be collected from them appears to be that a partnership, even as to third parties, is not coustituted by the mere fact of two or more persons participating in or being interested in the net profits of a business, but that the existence of such partnership implies also the existence of such a relation between such persons as that each of them is a principal, and each an agent for the other." Lord CRANWORTH, in his opinion in the case, (viz., of Cox v. Hickman,) uses this language: "It is often said that the test, or one of the tests, whether a person not ostensibly a partner is nevertheless, in contemplation of law, a partner, is whether he is entitled to participate in the profits. This, no doubt, is, in general, a sufficiently accurate test, for a right to participate in profits affords cogent, often conclusive, evidence that the trade in which the profits have been made was carried on in part for or on behalf of the person setting up such a claim. But the real ground of the liability is that the trade had been carried on by persons acting on his behalf. When that is the case, he is liable on the trade obligations, and entitled to its profits, or to a share of them. It is not strictly correct to say that his right to share in the profits makes him liable to the debts of the trade. The correct mode of stating the proposition is to say that the same thing which entitles him to the one makes him liable to the other, namely, the fact that the trade has been carried on in his behalf, i.e., that he stood in the relation of principal towards the persons acting ostensibly as the traders, by whom the liabilities have been incurred, and under whose management the profits have been made."
In the application of this rule many decisions are to be found by courts of last resort in this country to the effect that, notwithstanding a party may contract to receive a part of the profits of a business, he cannot be held liable as a partner. On the other hand, many others — sometimes by the same courts — hold the contrary. These cases are all reconcilable on the distinction that in the first class of cases there was a mere hiring of services, property, or money, to be paid for out of the profits of the business in which it was engaged; while in the latter there was a proprietary interest in the business. In other words, the distinction drawn by Judge O'BRIEN, supra, will, as a rule, sufficiently harmonize all the cases to which our attention has been called. Thus it was held by this court in Smith v. Knight,
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