Freeman v. Hemenway

75 Mo. App. 611 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1898

Lead Opinion

Smith, P. J. —

statement. This is an action to recover damages for the conversion of certain mining machinery, tools and appliances. There was a trial by the court without the intervention of a jury which resulted in judgment for plaintiff, and defendants appealed. The court as requested by defendants made a special finding of the facts in the case and stated its conclusions of law therein. And since the defendant’s abstract does not set forth the evidence adduced at the trial we must presume the facts to be as the court found them. Our examination of the case will therefore be restricted to the conclusions of law stated by the court.

It appears from the finding of facts made by the court that Diveley, Jarvis and plaintiff as a partnership owned the personal property, for the conversion of which this suit was brought, and employed the same in operating a certain zinc mine of which Diveley and Jarvis were licensees; that plaintiff owned a one fourth *614interest in said personal property and the other three fourths interest was owned by the other partners; that Diveley and Jarvis sold their interest in the mine together with said personal property of the partnership to the defendants; that the defendants entered into the exclusive possession of said personal property and have and thereafter retained the same, claiming to be the exclusive owners thereof and denying to plaintiff any right or interest therein as partner or tenant in common or otherwise, whereby the whole of plaintiff’s interest therein had become lost to him; that the defendants had converted and appropriated to their own use all of said mining machinery including plaintiff’s one fourth interest therein; that the plaintiff’s interest in said property was reasonably worth $300 on the twentieth day of February, 1892.

From these facts so found the conclusion of the court was that the plaintiff was entitled to recover from defendants on account of the conversion of plaintiff’s said interest in said property the sum of $300 with interest thereon at six per cent per annum since the date of the institution of this suit amounting to the total sum of $389.

Psa™oEfpa“tn¿r>s cotenan'ts: con-The sale by Diveley and J arvis of their entire interest in the said personal property to the defendants had the effect to ipso facto dissolve the partnership relation then existing between Diveley, Jarvis and plaintiff. 1 Oollyer on Part., 151. The defendants, the purchasers by virtue of their purchase, became cotenants with the plaintiff in respect to the ownership of the property. Diveley and Jarvis had the right to sell their own interest and the defendants had the right to purchase same. The mere fact that the defendants purchased the interest of the former did not of itself subject them to any liability to the plaintiff, unless, as *615the court found was the fact, they disregarded the plaintiff’s rights as cotenant by an appropriation of the property to their own use. McCoy v. Hyatt, 80 Mo. 139; Weise v. Moore, 22 Mo. App. 536; Watson v. King, 4 Camp. 272; Wilson v. Reed, 3 John. 175; Freeman on Co-Ten. and Part., secs. 306, 307.

It is quite true that when persons acquire interest in lands apparently for the sole purpose of working mines in them they must be considered as entering into a commercial partnership. Snyder v. Burnham, 77 Mo. 52. But this principle is inapplicable here for the reason that it was not found by the court that the plaintiff ever acquired any interest in the land on which the said mines were located, or that the partnership as such had any interest therein, and it must therefore follow that the plaintiff did not enter into the partnership arrangement with the defendants. Sharp v. Benoist, 7 Mo. App. 534, decides no more than that the sale and delivery of a chattel by one tenant in common is effectual to pass the interest of the vendor;,the vendee becomes part owner in possession and the other co-owner has no right of action against the vendee to recover possession.

Such sale if authorized by the cotenant is a conversion which will warrant an action of trover against the vendor, but leaves the vendee in the position theretofore occupied by the vendor. Diveley, Jarvis and plaintiff were not cotenants but partners. The case is not one where a cotenant has sold a chattel but where two members of a partnership have sold all the partnership property to purchasers who had knowledge of the interest of the other partner before they completed their purchase. Besides this there was here an actual conversion by the purchaser of the other partner’s interest in the property, while in the case just cited there was no such conversion of the interest of the *616other cotenant by the purchaser. The two cases are entirely dissimilar.

We find no fault with the trial court’s conclusions of law and so affirm the judgment.

All concur.





Rehearing

ON MOTION FOB, BEHEAEING.

The special finding made by the court shows that the relation between the plaintiff, Diveley and Jarvis was that of a commercial partnership under the name of “Diveley & Company.” A mining partnership arises only by implication from co-operation in the working of the joint property.

--: mines and mining: There may be a partnership in the working of a mine subject to the law of ordinary partnership. The working of a mine has been denominated . . _ a species ot trade (Mcbwnmey on Mines, Etc., 115) and if it is made the subject of a partnership agreement, the relation arising therefrom is a commercial partnership. A commercial partnership arises from agreement. In such case new members can not be intruded without the consent of the others. If one of the partners, in such partnership, convey his interest to another, the grantee would not become a member of the firm, he would be a tenant in common with the remaining partners. If, however, they should continue to work the mine, they would, in that event, become mining partners. Barringer & Adams on the Law of Mines and Mining, 753; McSwinney on Mines, Quarries and Minerals, 137.

It is thus to be seen that a mining partnership relation may arise in two ways: First. By operation of law where there is no partnership agreement but co-operation by co-owners or joint tenants in the working of mining property (Lindley on Mines, sec. 797); and, second, by agreement of the co-owners or joint *617tenants. In partnerships of the former kind there is no delectus personae consequently the membership is continually subject to changes beyond the contract of the partners. Decker v. Howell, 42 Cal. 636.

In the latter kind of partnership the delectus personae exists, and a new partner can no more be intruded therein without the consent of the remaining partners than in a strictly commercial partnership.

It follows from this, that since the mining partnership of Diveley & Company was in effect a commercial partnership; that the sale of the interest of Diveley and Jarvis therein to the defendants accomplished a dissolution of the partnership and created the relation of tenants in common between the plaintiff and defendants as to the property in dispute. This relation was not changed into a mining partnership by implication of law since they did not contine to work the mine. The defendants refused to co-operate and work the mine with the plaintiff. Accordingly, we think the relation of partners inter se or as to the public did not exist between plaintiff and defendants, either by implication or agreement.

The motion must be denied.