5 R.I. 402 | R.I. | 1858
The construction of 4 Anne, ch. 16, § 27, confining the action of account, as between joint-tenants and tenants in common and their representatives, to actual receipts by one, or more, of a greater share or proportion of the profits than has been received by the pursuing co-owners, is quite too narrow for the language employed by the General Assembly in the corresponding statute in our own digest. By our statute, (Rev. Stats. ch. 209, § 1,) the action is given, as between all co-owners *404 of property, real or personal, and their representatives, where "one or more of the owners of such common property shall take, receive, use or have benefit thereof, in greater proportion than his or their interest therein;" and the account to be rendered is of "the use and profit of such common property." The concluding words of the section "for receiving more than his or their part or proportion," are thrown back, for their meaning, to the preceding part of the section, by the immediately succeeding words, "as aforesaid." In this respect, as well as in remedying the injustice of the common law, which permits one part-owner of a chattel to exclude his co-owner from the use of the joint property without liability to account, it is obvious, that our statute takes a much wider range than that of Anne, and that the cases cited on the part of the defendants, bearing upon the construction of that statute, and of statutes conceived in similar terms, have no application to ours.
The defendants exclusively used the manufacturing establishment, embracing real and personal estate, in which the plaintiff's intestate was jointly interested with themselves, in a business, of the profits of which he could claim no share, and to the losses of which, consequently, he ought not, in any form, to be subject. Under such circumstances, the rentable value of the estate, as in an ordinary action for use and occupation, affords the fairest and most palpable test of the value of the use of the interest in it represented by the plaintiff. Any other would subject the plaintiff to the fluctuations of a business in which he has no concern, or open an investigation into the mode in which the defendants managed their own affairs, of which the plaintiff can know nothing, with a view of ascertaining what profits they might have made during the term in the manufacture of cotton cloth, had they managed with due care and skill. As this test was adopted by the auditor in arriving at his result, his report must be confirmed, with costs, and with interest on the amount, found by him to be due to the plaintiff at the date of the report. *405