15 S.E.2d 790 | Ga. | 1941
The pleadings and the evidence presented an issue for submission to a jury, as to accounting of partnership assets and of equal contribution.
1. "A court of equity has jurisdiction in all cases of an accounting and settlement between partners," where the partnership has not been dissolved. Smith v. Hancock,
2. After payment of the partnership debts, the petitioning partner is entitled to an accounting without the necessity of showing any exact amount as due, if he alleges and shows "facts sufficient to indicate that something will be found to be due him;" and he is entitled to a personal money judgment against the indebted partners for such amount as may be shown by the proof.Bowman v. Chapman,
(a) "When equity has assumed jurisdiction of a partnership accounting, it will retain jurisdiction so as to afford complete relief between the partners . . as to all controversies growing out of the partnership. The court does not lose jurisdiction of the cause by accepting the final account of a receiver," after a payment of partnership debts and settlement of all other matters. 47 C. J. 1205, § 913, and cit.
(b) Where after payment of the partnership debts no assets remain from which the respective debts and interests of the partners may be adjusted and paid, it is proper that the final decree fix the amounts due to any by each partner, and that a personal judgment be rendered against those indebted. 47 C. J. 1257, § 987; 1264-1267, §§ 995-998, and cit. If there is a joint liability by two or more partners, a joint judgment may be rendered, and the respective liabilities of the defendants may be adjudged. Gimpel v. Wilson,
(c) "Unless otherwise provided in the agreement [forming the partnership], partners shall be equally interested in all the stock or property brought into the business, it matters not by which; partners shall be equally entitled to share the profits and equally bound to pay the losses." Code, § 75-206. But if the partners have made an agreement that their shares shall be unequal, or that one shall pay to or for another partner a certain sum for acquiring a stated interest in the partnership assets, such an agreement will be given effect in a final settlement and accounting between the partners. 47 C. J. 780-782, §§ 221, 222, and cit.
3. Under the preceding rulings, the judge erred in refusing, at the final hearing, to submit to the jury the question of accounting, and in dismissing the action. Under the pleadings, the defendant father was personally liable to the plaintiff for the $1250 and interest, which it is alleged he expressly promised the plaintiff to pay. This is true even if the father was not a member of the partnership. If he was a member, as the petition alleges but the answer denies, he would be liable also as a partner. The defendant sons, having admitted their membership and ownership of a half interest in the partnership, and such interest with its rights and privileges having been acquired only by virtue of the father's agreement to pay the $1250 representing their entire equal contribution to the partnership assets, equity will decree that all are equally liable to the plaintiff. The mere fact, as contended by the defendants and stated in the decree, that the brother-in-law paid the original vendor in full, and the plaintiff has been thereby relieved of any liability to the original vendor, would not deprive the plaintiff of a right to an accounting and judgment against the father and the sons, in order that an equal contribution to the partnership assets might be effected, where it appears that the plaintiff's payment of the $1250 cash was the only personal contribution made by the partners for the partnership assets of $2500, and where the failure of the other partners to pay the $1250 balance, as agreed, necessitated its payment by the receivers out of the partnership funds.
Judgment reversed. All the Justices concur. *526