82 Mo. 209 | Mo. | 1884
This suit was instituted in the circuit court of Lafayette county for the purpose of settling a partnership between plaintiff’ and defendant, entered into in 1869 aud continuing till 1871. The petition alleges that the accounts were unsettled; avers that upon settlement a large balance was due plaintiff; and asks that an account be taken and judgment rendered for the amount claimed to be due. The answer is' a general denial.
The following extracts made from the reports of the referee, after the case had been in his hands for about two years, will suggest sufficient reasons why we decline to do so. He states that, in his investigations, he took some eight hundred pages of testimony and that after giving
The referee, in his second report which was finally acted upon by the court, says: “ The magnitude and importance of the issues involved in this suit, and the settlement of this partnership warn and admonish the referee to be careful in his finding, and he regrets extremely that he cannot say when his report is made that it is susceptible
When the above statements are considered, and the further fact is taken into account, that the court after some months of consideration of the report and all the evidence before it, reached the result announced in the judgment, we must decline to pass upon the questions involved, in the absence of the evidence shedding light on the partnership transactions and guiding the referee and court to the final conclusion arrived at. If with this light before them they blundered, we, being deprived of it, would be most likely to commit greater blunders.' Besides this, it appears-that the entire business of the partnership was in the-hands and under the control of plaintiff, and from the mutilated, torn, erased, scratched condition of the books,, every inference favorable to defendant should have been drawn, and drawing such an inference, had the referee-charged to the firm the item of $9,588.78, which he omitted from his second statement of account, we would not with the lights now before us have interfered with it.
Judgment affirmed,