239 Pa. 42 | Pa. | 1913
Opinion by
The contending parties to this proceeding being alike dissatisfied with the result reached in the court below, we have here two appeals from the same decree. We shall endeavor to dispose of all the matters in issue in a single opinion. The facts as stated by the reporter are quite sufficient to acquaint with a history of the case, and these need not be repeated here. That the partnership agreement of 24th November, 1897, expresses the terms upon which, in the event of the death of any one of the partners, the survivors were to acquire the interest of the deceased partner is admitted; disagreement arises only as the value of the deceased partner’s interest becomes a question for determination. The several sections of the agreement which are involved are thirteenth and fourteenth. These we here recite:
“13th. In the event of the death of any one or more of said, copartners, the deceased party’s estate shall not continue to retain the decedent’s partnership interest, but the said interest shall, within thirty days after such death, be considered as absolutely withdrawn and severed from the business of said firm, and the surviving partners shall purchase all the right, title and interest*50 therein of the decedent for a sum equal to his share of the net assets of the firm at the inventory last preceding the said death, minus such amounts as he may have drawn in cash or merchandise and plus such amounts as he may have contributed over and above his share, as set forth in Article II of this agreement, from the time of his death back to the last preceding inventory, and further plus an amount equal to ten (10) per cent, of the aforesaid decedent’s partnership interest, in consideration of the decedent’s part of the good will of this firm. Provided, however, that the said last preceding inventory shows the net profits of this firm for the one year preceding such inventory, to have been not less than ten (10) per cent, of the said total capital as set forth in the second section of this agreement, and in case Such profits shall have been less than ten (10) per cent, as last aforesaid, then the decedent’s estate shall be entitled to receive only one hundred ($100.00) dollars in consideration for the decedent’s part of the good will of the firm.
“14th. In the event of such purchase by the surviving partners the said survivors shall make payment therefor by giving the promissory note of the firm of the surviving partners, for the full amount, to the proper persons administering upon the estate of such decedent, and such promissory note shall be payable one year after the 1st of January following the above death, provided, however, that at the maturity of such promissory note the said surviving partners may at their option pay in cash only one-fourth of its amount, and give their promissory note for the three-fourths of the amount payable within two years after the first day of January or July following such death, and at the maturity of this last promissory note the said surviving partners may, at their option, pay, in cash only, one-third of its amount and give their promissory note for two-thirds of its amount, and such promissory note to be due and payable within three years after the first day of January or July*51 following the above said death, and at the maturity of this last said note the said surviving partners may, at their option, pay in cash only, one-half of its amount, and give their promissory note for the other half; such promissory note to be due and payable four years after the first day of January or July following the above said death. And the surviving partners shall also give to the proper persons administering upon the estate of the decedent a bond or bonds, with approved security, conditioned upon the payment of the aforesaid note, and the full indebtedness to the said estate; and all the above said notes shall bear interest at the rate of four (4) per cent, per annum.”
Before turning our attention to the specific items which are here the subject of dispute, let us state several inferences which we think necessarily follow from a plain reading of these sections. First: what the surviving partners were to acquire under the agreement was the entire interest of the one dying in all the partnership effects, such interest not to be measured .by his share of the capital employed, but to embrace any and all things of value belonging to the partnership in the way of assets. Second: what the surviving partners were to pay in consideration was a sum equal to the deceased partner’s interest in such assets after all charges should have been deducted, less such amounts as the deceased partner may have drawn in cash or merchandise, and plus certain items which we shall consider later. Third: the value of' these assets was to be determined according to inventory method; in other words, they were to be inventoried and appraised. Fourth: the agreement did not contemplate in such case a special inventory distinct from that which the partnership was accustomed to make in January of each year, but had reference to the inventory of this character made January preceding the death of the partner. The particular inventory made January, 1905, with its valuation, is here accepted, not only as fair and impartial, but
Does the case show any asset of value not included in the firm inventory, or specifically mentioned in the agreement as an independent asset to be accounted for? Contention is made on part of the personal representatives of the deceased partner that there are several such. We shall consider them in their order. First: they claim as a distinct asset not appearing in any inventory, the enhanced value of the several leaseholds owned by the partnership, the one-fourth of which the court below found to be $58,881.48. The partnership was engaged in conducting a large department store in the City of Pittsburgh. To serve its purposes it secured leases on several adjoining lots of ground extending for different periods at fixed rentals. On these lots it erected at its
We pass to the next item in dispute. The ruling of the court with respect to this is assigned as error by those representing the estate of Jacob Kaufmann, the deceased partner in appeal No. 201, October T., as follows: “Seventh: The learned trial judge erred in Ms sixth conclusion of law, which is as follows: ‘Sixth. The ten (10) per cent, of the decedent’s partnership interest was properly calculated upon the amount of Jacob’s interest shown by the balance account, less his share of the profits withdrawn by him.’ ” The reference here is to the ten per cent, allowed for the good will. The language of the agreement with respect to this is, “and further plus an amount equal to ten per cent, of the aforesaid decedents’ partnership interest, in considera
Another claim advanced on behalf of Jacob’s estate is for participation in what is asserted to be a reserved fund belonging to the partnership. It was the custom of the firm to strike a certain per cent, from the inventoried value of the assets and carry forward the amount so deducted as an asset on a private ledger. These discounts had so accumulated by 1st January, 1905, that they amounted to $169,000. Each year, after the inventory had been made, the amount deducted from the valuation was credited to the several departments, not by way of reduction of the inventoried valuation, but as a distinct credit to the departments. The result may have been the same, but this fact stands out too clearly for dispute, that no such deduction or abatement, however made, or for what purpose, ever entered into any inventory of net assets. It appeared in the accounts of the several departments as a credit, and in the private ledger of the firm, and in the balance account furnished 12th June; but none of these, nor all together, constituted the inventory which was made 1st January, 1905, by which alone the value of the net assets was to be determined. Mr. Blum, the chief book-keeper, testified that the department ledger was charged with the full amount of merchandise as inventoried, and that the discount was there credited (not by those making the inventory, but by the partners themselves) to the several departments. He further testified that in making these inventories the department managers knew nothing with respect to this discount, that it was never taken into consideration by them and had no place in the
Still another claim is advanced — the right in the estate to participate in the earnings of the partnership between January 1, 1905, and Jacob’s death in November following. It is enough to say with respect to this that it is not so written in the contract. Viewing this contract in the light of subsequent events, it may seem, to one not fully acquainted with the considerations which influenced its making, as inequitable in several respects, and this among them. To the partners themselves, however, capable and experienced men of business as they were, knowing the relation of each to the other, and with purposes to be accomplished which concerned only themselves, these provisions which now seem to work injustice to the estate of the partner the first to die, were not only just but essential. These provisions are too plain to be misunderstood, and from the time the agreement was entered into in 1897 down to 1905 they remained unchanged. This contract was the law of the partnership, and the courts can have no power over it except to give it effect according to its own expressed terms. It affords no warrant for the claim made. At the expiration of thirty days following Jacob’s death his interest in the partnership, which included all its earnings up to that time, passed to the surviving partners at a price determined by the inventory of the January ngxt preceding. The court so held and disallowed the present claim. In this there was no error.
The question of interest alone remains to be com sidered. The decree charges the surviving partners with interest on the sum of $268,263.70, at the rate of 4 per cent, from 1st January, 1907, to 22d June, 1911. The
We think this a proper application of established rules, and the decree in this regard meets our approval. So, too, with respect to the disposition made of the costs.
We find nothing in the decree calling for correction except in the particulars we have above referred to; but because of these the decree must be changed. We, therefore, reverse the present decree and remit the record with instructions that a decree be entered conforming to the views here expressed. The costs in each appeal to be paid by appellants therein.