76 N.J. Eq. 185 | New York Court of Chancery | 1909
The theory of the bill in this case is that Walter M. Jackson and Horace E. Hooper are and' for a number of years have been partners in business. The bill is filed for the purpose of dissolving the partnership and for an accounting of all the partnership affairs. It also prays for an injunction to restrain the defendants, Horace E. Hooper, Harris E. Burrows, Charles C. Whinery and Eranklin H. Hooper from transferring or disposing of some shares of stock standing in the names of the said Harris B. Burrows, Charles C. Whinery and Franklin H. Hooper, on the books of two corporations, one an English corporation and the other a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Illinois; and also from withdrawing from the so-called partnership business any moneys for the private use of any of the defendants, and from interfering with the assets thereof, except in the regular course and in the ordinary conduct of the business, and from excluding the complainant from participation in the conduct of the business.
The bill alleges that prior to the year 1900 the complainant, J ackson, and Horace E. Hooper had been associated with J ames Clarke and George Clarke in the business of selling subscription books in England; that they purchased the Clarke interest in that business in March, 1900; that at that time an agreement was entered into between Jackson and Hooper which is set out in the bill as follows:
“That upon the acquisition of the Clarke interests and so long as they might be associated together in business, their general policy in respect to their joint undertakings should be determined by mutual assent; that*187 nothing should be done by either in connection therewith contrary to the wishes or against the interests of the other; that in respect of their said business enterprises, their ownership interests and authority and control in management should be on a basis of exact equality and that each should have and exercise the authority and control of equal partners ; a further proviso being- agreed upon to the effect that either might act alone in the routine conduct of the business in the absence of the other.”
The bill further states that Jackson and Hooper carried on an extensive and very profitable subscription book business from 1900 until near the end of 1908; that a part of the business was conducted and carried on under the individual names of the complainant and the defendant Horace E. Hooper, and a part by the use of trade names assumed or acquired for the purpose; that a part of the business was conducted by them directly as individuals and other parts in the names of corporations organized by them for the purpose, and also. through the agency of other individuals, but that their more important engagements and undertakings were made in their own names; that during this period the complainant and Hooper acquired the copyright and trade name of the Encyclopaedia Britannica, the title to which was taken in their individual names, and that the business relating to the sale of the encyclopaedia to individual customers was conducted in the name of some newspaper like the “London Times,” or under some trade name adopted by them; that the accounts in the early history of the business were kept in the books of the Clarke Company, Ltd., but that the banking accounts in which were deposited the receipts from all their business were kept indiscriminately at that time either in the name of Jackson or Hooper or Clarke Company, Ltd., and that these accounts were subject to check by either Hooper or the complainant, and that each drew therefrom at will for his private use.
The bill further states that in order to avoid the provisions of the English Tax law, it was determined, in 1902, to liquidate the Clarke Company, Ltd., and to organize in its place two other companies, one under the English law, to be called Hooper & Jackson, Ltd., to transact business in Great Britain, and the other under the law of the State of Hew York, to be known as
The hill alleges further that the business in which these parties had embarked was carried on with great vigor and with great profit all over the world, and that accounts thereof were kept at a central office in London, the accounts relating to the English business after the liquidation of Clarke & Company, Ltd., being kept in the books of Hooper & Jackson, Ltd., and the accounts relating to the business in the other portions of the world being kept in the name of the Illinois corporation; that the cash receipts from the business in all the countries covered thereby were deposited indiscriminately in the same banking accounts, from which expenditures were made generally without regard to whether the business concerned was entered on one set of accounts or the other, or whether the business involved was that conducted in Great Britain or in foreign countries; that these accounts were kept in the name of Hooper & Jackson, Ltd., and in the names of Horace E. Hooper, the defendant, and Walter M. Jackson, the complainant, and until 1904, in the name of the
The bill further alleges that the profits drawn by Hooper and Jackson were drawn in the manner just indicated; that they drew substantially equal amounts; that they were not paid any salaries out of the corporation assets or out of any other assets of the business so called; that no dividends were ever declared by either of these corporations, except on one occasion when it became necessary for some purpose of convenience to declare a dividend of four hundred per cent, out of the surplus of Hooper & Jackson, Ltd.; that no meetings of the stockholders or of the directors of either of these corporations were ever held, except to comply with the most formal requirements of the statutes under which they were organized, and that until the controversy arose which is the foundation of this suit, neither of the said corporations as such had any active hand in the conduct of the enormous business which arose out of the sale by subscription of sets of the Encyclopaedia Britannica. In fact the bill states that only four meetings of the directors of the Illinois company have ever been held; that when these meetings were held no business affairs or business policy was ever discussed; that the three nominal directors of the Illinois company and of the Hew York company, which preceded it were changed from time to time as Hooper and the complainant decreed, and that, in short, the whole business was conducted jointly by Hooper & Jackson as their own business, and that they made use of the corporations they had organized as mere agencies for carrying out the plans which the two principal parties from time to time agreed upon between themselves; and that the other directors as such had little or no
The bill further sets out large and important transactions touching the conduct of the said business which were carried through wholly by Hooper and Jackson without the aid of the corporations, and concerning which they made and executed contracts in their individual names. Particularly does the bill refer to an enterprise so conducted known as “The Times Book Club,” which was a specially devised scheme for selling sets of the encyclopaedia through the instrumentality of the “London Times.” The bill states that the outstanding assets of the business, the legal title to which assets is in the two corporations, is very large, approximately two millions of dollars, and this, in addition to the title of the copjuights and publication rights of the encyclopaedia, which, since June 1st, 1903, have stood, and now stand, in the name of the Illinois corporation, and which are valued by the complainant at a very large sum.
The bill further states that just prior to July, 1908, the defendant, Hooper, and the complainant had a disagreement in relation to their joint undertaking which arose out of a proposition to consolidate the encyclopaedia business with the property known as the “London Times”; that negotiations-were afterwards opened for the sale of the encyclopaedia business as a whole; that the breach widened, and that finally steps were taken by Hooper, with the aid of Burrows, Whinery and Franklin H. Hooper, as directors in the Illinois corporation, to exclude the complainant from participation in the conduct of the business; that among other things complained of by him is that the bylaws of the Illinois corporation were amended so that the authority to conduct the entire business of the corporation was practically given to Horace E. Hooper, the president, and by making a majority of the stock necessary for a quorum at a stockholders’ meeting, whereas previously the said Hooper and Jackson were equal stockholders, and no meeting could be held without their joint action. The bill alleges also that Hooper, who has obtained control of the English corporation, is threatening to turn over all its assets to the Illinois corporation, and that he has recorded a vote, he himself being the sole director present
There is hardly any proposition of fact contained in the bill which is not more or less specifically denied, with one very important exception that will be noted hereafter. In particular, does Mr. Hooper deny the making of the partnership agreement, which is sot out at the beginning of the bill. He claims that he and Jackson never entered into any partnership agreement, that they never were partners, but that on the contrary, they were simply equal stockholders, in what are now two corporations, and that there is nothing in the case set out in upwards of five hundred printed pages of affidavits which would justify the court in charging him as a partner with the complainant in this business.
The fundamental feature of the complainant’s case, as it is framed, is the agreement set out at the beginning of the bill which the complainant calls the partnership agreement. If no such agreement exists, or ever existed, it is difficult to perceive how the court can declare in favor of a strict partnership. If,
There are some statements which, for the purposes of this motion, I shall assume to be facts. Hooper and Jackson engaged in business with the Clarkes, bought them out in 1900 or thereabouts, organized Clarke & Company, Ltd., and at that time carried on the business by their joint direction; they were equal stockholders in that early corporation; they managed it jointly, with the aid of persons who were merely employes, and from that time forward they appear to have employed the corporation form as a mere agency for the convenient and proper conduct of the extremely large business in which they were engaged. There are a number of striking facts in this connection which may be here spokeu of. None of these companies ever paid any salaries to either Hooper or Jackson, although they were making enormous profits and acquiring large amounts of property. No dividends were ever declared with the single exception herein above mentioned. Instead of dividends upon their corporate stock, Hooper and Jackson drew profits from the bank accounts of the business; each drew against such accounts as he saw fit, and they each drew a substantially equal amount. The corporation business was carried on, not by meetings of the boards of directors, but by consultation and agreement between Mr. Hooper and Mr. Jackson, and they appear to have made and unmade these corporations, in which they were equally interested, at their will. Many references are made to “the business.” Mr. Hooper, in a letter written to his brother Eranklin H. Hooper, on April 3d, 1905, comments upon the situation. He encloses in that letter a debit memorandum from the New York office for £805, which is to go through Mr. Muirhead’s account- on the books of the
“I wish you would try and get it into somebody’s bead over there that the whole concern is one, and that it never does any good trying to rob one part of the business for the benefit of the other.”
But perhaps the most cogent fact is the indiscriminate commingling of the accounts, fully set out on page eleven of the printed copy of the bill, and not denied by the principal defendant, or any of the affiants who come to his support. The complainant says that receipts from all the countries in which these gentlemen did business were deposited indiscriminately in the same banking accounts, from which expenditures were made generally without regard to whether the business concerned was entered on one set of accounts or the other, or whether the business involved was that conducted in Great Britain or in foreign countries ; that funds received from every source alike were deposited in banking accounts kept in four different names and were subject to withdrawal by the principal parties to this litigation, and that they drew indiscriminately in any name used by them in the conduct of their business. While this statement lacks that degree of full and exact verification which ought to accompany so important a narration, inquiry was made by me on the argument concerning the truth of it, and I understood that it was not denied. This statement is wholly inconsistent with the defendant’s claim that the business was conducted by the corporations; it shows that the corporation form was a mere form and lends credence to the statement of the complainant that the business was conducted by Mr. Hooper and himself, and that they used the corporations as mere agents.
It appears in the papers that Hooper and Jackson made a personal contract with Eranklin H. Hooper by which they agreed
If the situation is as it is claimed to be by the complainant, then we have the spectacle of the complainant having wrested from him a hand in the control of a business in which he is interested to the extent of one-half, and this action is accomplished by the other half owner not by extraneous means but by the use and manipulation of the complainant’s own stock.
I therefore find that the complainant and the defendant Horace E. Hooper were engaged as principals in a joint undertaking in which they had equal interests, and in which, until this controversy arose between them, they exercised equal control, and from which they derived and were entitled to equal shares of the
The complainant claims that he and Horace E. Hooper were partners. If they occupied toward each other the legal relation of. partners certain rights, duties and liabilities flow therefrom which will need" to be considered. It is not always easy to define a partnership or to state in general terms what actual rights, duties and liabilities are included in the term. There must of course be a business to be carried on for profit; there must likewise be some sort of community of interest and a sharing of profits and losses; but all these requirements may exist and yet there may be no partnership. It was held in Cox v. Hickman (1860), 8 H. L. C. 268, in the opinion of Lord Cranworth and Lord Wensleydale, that the relation between so-called partners was best ascertained by inquiring whether their agreement was of such a nature as that one was agent for the other or the others. This requirement was adopted by our court of errors and appeals in Wild v. Davenport (1886), 48 N. J. Law (19 Vr.) 129. Mr. Justice Depue, speaking for the court, says: “My citation of authorities has been made with a view of showing that a right to receive a share of the profits of a business does not furnish an invariable test of a partnership even as to creditors; that a person not actually engaged in the business as a principal and not holding himself out as a partner, cannot be held for debts contracted in the business as dormant partner unless in virtue of some contract, express or implied, on his part in legal effect creating as between him and the persons actually carrying on the business the relation of principal and agent.” Cox v. Hickman appears to express the law in England at the present time. Bullen v. Sharp (1865), L. R. C. P. 86; 35 L. J. C. P. 105; and see the opinions in the cases of Mollwo v. Court of Wards (1872), L. R. 4 P. C. 419; Adam v. Newbigging (1888), 13 A. C. 308; 57 L. J. Ch. 1066. I have failed to find any case in which our court of errors and appeals has receded from its adoption of the doctrine in Wilde v. Davenport. The rule is followed by the supreme court in Sedbury v. Bolles, 51 N. J. Law (22 Vr.) 103, and by this court in Hallenback v. Rogers, 57 N. J. Eq. (12 Dick.) 199. The rule is distinguished from that
Mr. Justice Story, in the first section of his work on Partnership, says: “Every partner is an agent of the partnership, and his rights, powers, duties and obligations are in many respects governed by the same rules and principles as those of an agent; a partner, indeed, virtually embraces the character both of a principal and of an agent. So far as he acts for himself' and his own interest in the common concerns of the partnership, he may properly be deemed a principal, and so far as he acts for his partners, he may as properly be deemed an agent.” The case of Carr v. Hertz, 54 N. J. Eq. (9 Dick.) 127; affirmed, 54 N. J. Eq. (9 Dick.) 700, exemplifies another phase of the theory. There one member of a firm executed a chattel mortgage to secure a firm debt; the other party did not join; he dissented therefrom and so notified the chattel mortgagee. The chattel mortgage was declared to be void on the ground that the agency of the one partner to act for the firm had been revoked, and that the mortgagee had notice of it.
The application of this rule to the facts in this case leaves my mind in some doubt as to whether the agreement set out in the-bill itself amounts to a partnership agreement, or whether the-long course of dealing between the complainant and Horace E. Hooper would justify the inference that they considered that some sort of a partnership existed between them. The feature-
This rather leads me to the view that the series of transactions set out in the -bill were not strict partnership affairs, but belonged to that class of transactions which are known by the name of joint adventures; there is a class of cases which relate to persons who embark in such undertakings, but who do not enter upon the prosecution of their business as partners strictly. The case of Ross v. Stevens (1888), 45 N. J. Eq. (18 Stew.) 231, is an example. That ease dealt with a real estate transaction in which the evidence of the relation of the parties was contained in a letter written by one to the other in which the writer said: “It is hereby distinctly understood and agreed that this purchase is a joint transaction involving you equally with me,” and in another letter states that they are to share equally in any profit or loss resulting from the transaction. Vice-Chancellor Van Eleet held that the arrangement was not a partnership but a joint venture, and his judgment was affirmed on appeal. The report is meagre, but it is sufficient to differentiate a joint adventure from a partnership and to indicate the full jurisdiction of a court of equity over that class of cases. In Warwick v. Stockton (1896), 55 N. J. Eq. (10 Dick.) 61, Vice-Chancellor Pitney dealt squarely with the question. There an inventor sold to a manufacturer the exclusive right to manufacture and sell certain inventions; the manufacturer to furnish all the capital for the enterprise and to pay the inventor half the profits and a salary for his services. The vice-chancellor saj's, by way of distinguishing the case from Wild v. Davenport, supra: “There is no provision expressed or implied that the complainant [the inventor] should have the usual power of a partner as agent of the firm to bind the partnership and to take part in the details of the management of the business, nor is there anything in the ■ agreement to indicate that he was to be
Another case is Simmons v. Lima Oil Co. (1906), 71 N. J. Eq. (1 Buch.) 174. There Vice-Chancellor Garrison sustained a suit in equity to wind up a joint adventure because of the misconduct of one of the parties, and for an accounting.
While this distinction exists it has been held that the partnership and the joint adventure are of a similar nature, and that the rules of law which apply to partnerships apply also to joint adventures. In Getly v. Devlin (1873), 54 N. Y. 403, there was before the court a joint enterprise in which it was alleged that one of the parties had been guilty of a fraud upon the others. Concerning the law touching the relationship, Commissioner Earl says: “In all such cases, the subscribers enter into relations of trust and confidence with each other. They engage in a common enterprise for their mutual benefit, and have the right to demand and expect from their associates good faith in all that relates to their common interests. Equality and mutuality of burdens and benefits is implied in all such enterprises in proportion to the amounts subscribed, and no one of the subscribers can be permitted to take to himself a secret or separate advantage to the prejudice of his associates.”
The same rule was announced by the supreme court of Pennsylvania in McCutcheon v. Smith, 173 Pa. St. 101; 33 Atl. Rep. 881.
In Marston v. Gould, 69 N. Y. 220, there was a joint adventure in the purchase and sale of shares of the capital stock of the Erie Railway Company, in which the funds were to be provided by the defendant, who was to bear the loss if a loss should ensue, but in which the plaintiff was to have one-fifth of the profit, if there was a profit. This transaction was held not to be a partnership, but a joint enterprise, and that as such it was terminable at any time by either of the parties, and that either could maintain an equitable action against the other for an accounting. See, also, Hurley v. Walton, 63 Ill. 260; Edson v.
And finally it has been held that a contract concerning a joint adventure does not need to be express, but may be implied from the conduct of the parties. In Knapp v. Hanley, 108 Mo. App. 353; 83 S. W. Rep. 1005, there was a joint enterprise alleged in the plaintiff’s petition arising out of an express contract. Apparently, the plaintiff failed to prove the contract, and the court permitted the course of business between the parties to be offered in evidence. There was a demurrer to the evidence which came on for argument in the appellate court. I quote from the opinion: “The law did not devolve upon the plaintiff in the trial to establish the agreements declared on as express contracts of the parties, but it was legally sufficient to exhibit a state of facts from which such agreements might reasonably be inferred by the jury. The evidence expressly disclosed the joint employment and undertaking, but by legal implication in the absence of distinct separate agency, the authority conferred and rights acquired thereby are presumed to be joint. Words of express joinder are not essential, but language of severance must be applied and be present to produce several responsibility or right. * * * As a consequence of such joint agency the law exacted from them the highest degree of good faith, not only toward their principal, but also in all other dealings with each other, and it implied an agreement for an equal division of the compensation paid for their joint services by their common principal in their joint employment.”
It thus appears that if these parties are joint adventurers, practically the same rules apply as apply to the relation of partnership. An agreement may be implied from the course of dealing, and when once the engagement has been made the
In my opinion, the complainant is entitled to an injunction broad enough to hold the status quo, and yet so limited as not to interfere with the orderly, regular and usual conduct of the business. Any interference with the efficiency of its management at this stage of the litigation would be wrong and would not be desired by either of the parties. My present impression is that the injunctive order now in force attains the object just indicated, but I will hear counsel on the scope of the injunction within the limits above mentioned upon the settlement of the order.
AI-generated responses must be verified and are not legal advice.