37 Neb. 158 | Neb. | 1893
In the month of March, 1881, Henry J. Lee, C. A. Fried, E. M. Andreesen, and H. T. Clarke entered into a written agreement whereby they associated themselves as partners under the firm name of Lee, Fried & Co., for the purpose of dealing at wholesale in nails, hardware, and tinners’ stock.' This partnership business was to commence in March, 1881, and to expire January 1,1883, after which it continued probably upon the same terms as provided in said contract, though we find in the record no direct evidence of any agreement as to such continuance. The business was carried on by the firm of Lee, Fried & Co. until the death of C. A. Fried, which occurred August 16, 1887 j indeed, even then, matters continued as before, except that Otto Lobeck, having qualified as execufor of the estate of C. A. Fried, acted in place of said decedent. On the 30th day of December, 1887, Henry J. Lee, Henry T. Clarke, Edward M. Andreesen, and one John T. Clarke entered into a written contract, to which said executor, as such, was a party, of which contract the following is a copy:
“This contract, made on the 29th day of December, A. D. 1887, by and between the surviving partners of the firm known as Lee, Fried & Co., to-wit, Henry J. Lee, Henry T. Clarke, Edward M. Andreesen, and Otto Lobeck, executor of the estate of C. A. Fried, deceased, parties of the first part, and Henry J. Lee, Henry T. Clarke, Edward M..
“Witness our hands this 30th day of December, A. D. 1887. Lee, Fried & Co.,
“Henry J. Lee, '
“Lee, Fried & Co.,
“Henry T. Clarke,
“Edward M. Andreesen,
“Otto Lobeck,
“Administrator with will attached,
“ Parties of the First Part.
“Henry J. Lee,
“Henry T. Clarke,
“Edward M. Andreesen,
“John T. Clarke,
“ Parties of the Second Part.”
Consistently with the terms of the above contract the said Henry J. Lee, Henry T. Clarke, Edward M. Andreesen, and John T. Clarke organized a corporation under the name of Lee-Clarke-Andreesen Hardware. Company, which took possession of the entire property invoiced as described in the aforesaid written agreement and the bill of sale, executed January 16, 1888, of which the following is a copy:
“Know all men by these presents, that, for a valuable consideration, we, Henry J. Lee, Henry T. Clarke, and Edward M. Andreesen, surviving partners of the late firm of Lee, Fried & Co., have bargained and sold, and by these presents do bargain and sell, unto the Lee-Clarke
“Witness our hands this 16th day of January, 1888.
“Lee, Fried & Co.
“Edward M. Andreesen.
“H. T. Clarke.
“H. J. Lee.”
It does not satisfactorily appear why the above bill of sale was not signed by Otto Lobeck as the representative of C. A. Fried, for, while it purports to be made to carry into execution the written contract of date December 29, 1887, in which said Lobeck, in his representative capacity, appeared as one of the parties of the first part, he seems by common consent to have been omitted from even mention in the bill of sale. It might be inferable from the draft of date December 31, 1887, made by Otto Lobeck, as administrator of C. A. Fried’s estate, upon the firm of Fried & Co. in favor of C. O. Lobeck, for $5,000, that the said administrator had elected to, and had thereby in part consummated his said election to withdraw from said firm. If this satisfactorily appeared, the determination of this appeal would be much simplified. As the evidence does not explain the non-joinder of Lobeck as administrator in the bill of sale, and as it does not .point to sufficient certainty of intent to warrant placing great stress upon it, the bill of sale will be assumed to have been made in execution of the contract entered into on December 29, 1887, and upon that assumption the rights of the parties will be considered without reference to said draft.
The answer, in addition to other denials which need not be detailed, denied that the good-will was of any value, but alleged that it passed incidentally with the stock of goods purchased; that the invoice covered such good-will, and that by said executor having accepted payment on account of the interest of the estate of his decedent under the terms of said written agreement, he was estopped to make claim for the value of the good-will of the firm of Lee, Fried & Co. There was a reply, which was in substance a denial of the various affirmative matters pleaded in the answer.
On the 11th day of February, 1891, a trial was had to the court, upon which the court found for the defendants and adjudged that the cause be dismissed for want of equity and that said defendants recover their costs. During the trial of the case plaintiff offered to show the value of the good-will of the firm of Lee, Fried & Co. as a fact independent of, and in addition to, the price paid for the merchandise of said firm purchased by the defendants. This offer of evidence was refused, and in various ways the questions which shall now be considered were properly presented for adjudication. These involve the construction of the contract, between plaintiff and the other parties to the above contract, and the respective rights and remedies of such parties, with reference to the good-will of the firm of Lee, Fried & Co.
From this synopsis it is evident (aside from paying the indebtedness of the firm of Lee, Fried & Co., and making collections of its outstanding accounts for that purpose) that each of the said first parties to said contract agreed to accept payment, for the property inventoried, in the stock of the proposed corporation, or partly in stock and the balance in money, at said proposed corporation’s option. Among themselves the parties of the first part further agreed that in event payment should be made in the stock of said proposed corporation, .it should be divided, in a certain manner, with the proviso, however, that if the executor of C. A. Fried should elect to receive money rather than stock, each of the other parties of the first part would pay him in cash one-third of the par value of said stock. This action was brought against the Lee-ClarkeAndreesen Hardware Company, Henry J. Lee, Henry T. Clarke, and Edward M. Andreesen. There is no averment' in the petition of any demand for the delivery to plaintiff of stock by the Lee-Clarke-Andreesen Hardware Company nor of a refusal by that corporation to issue stock alone or make payment partly in its stock and partly in money as provided in said agreement. The complaint of violations of the above contract is made solely as against Henry J. Lee, Henry T. Clarke, and Edward M. Andreesen — the said hardware company being only incidentally mentioned as having ratified said contract and assumed all the rights to and secured all the benefits thereof by taking possession of all the property, assets, and estate of the former firm of Lee; Fried & Co., by, through, and under said contract, and appropriating the stock, fixtures, good-will, and certain leasehold interests and estates of said firm of Lee, Fried & Co., for the purpose of specially protecting and securing
As the judgment prayed was for the value of the “goodwill” of the firm of Lee, Fried & Co., it may not be without profit to define that term. In Dougherty v. Van Nostrand, 1 Hoffman Ch. [N. Y.], 69, it was said: “The good-will of a trade is called by Lord Eldon the probability that the old customers will resort to the old place. (Curtwell v. Lee, 17 Vesey [Eng.], 346.)” In Parsons, Partnership, on marginal page 262*, the term “good-will” is thus discussed: “It is a hope or expectation which may be reasonable and strong and may rest upon a state of things that has grown up through a long period and been promoted by large expenditures of money. And it may be worth all the money it has cost and a great deal more, but it is, after all, nothing more than a hope grounded upon a probability.”
These definitions have reference to but one, though the generally employed, use of the term “good-will.” In 2 Lawson’s Rights, Remedies, and Practice, sec. 685, the same form of good-will is defined, in conjunction with which,
In section 99 of Story, Partnership, the generally employed definition of this term is given, after which occurs the following language: “But the term ‘good-will’ is sometimes applied to another case, where a retiring partner contracts not to carry on the same trade or business at all, or not within a given distance. This is an interest which may be valued between the parties, and may therefore be assigned with the premises and the rest of the effects to the remaining partner as an accompaniment of the ordinary good-will of the establishment. Good-will, in the former sense, is therefore an advantage arising from the mere fact of sole ownership of the premises, stock, or establishment, without reference to other persons as rivals; and in the latter sense as an advantage arising from the fact of excluding the retiring partner from the same trade or business as a rival.”
In the discussion of adjudicated cases there has not always been kept in view, much less stated, what particular form of good-will was under consideration. For' instance, where it is the right to use the trade-mark adopted and made valuable by a firm or an individual, it is readily seen that it has something of the nature of tangible personal property, and as such independently might properly be subject to sale. This form of property is frequently protected by injunction, and, in various ways, is treated as one form of good-will having no analogy to that form under consideration in the case at bar. Again, the term is sometimes applied to the contract obligation to refrain from competition by a retiring partner as against the other members of the firm, either as measured by the extent of territory or duration of time. Such an advantage as this
Of these forms of good-will which imply a monopoly such as the courts will protect, it has been said that goodwill may independently be transferred. This distinction as to the use of the term “good-will” is recognized in the above text quoted from Story and from Collyer on Partnership. Speaking generally, it is believed it will be found that whatever confusion has arisen as to the right to transfer good-will specifically and independently, is refei’ablo simply to a failure to distinguish these different forms of good-will. As to that form which must alone be considered in determining this ease there is no confusion of interpretation nor conflict of authorities. Treating of it is the following language, quoted from Collyer, Partner- • ship, section 162: “The former species of good-will is clearly not founded in special contract, but in a combination of accidental circumstances; as the existence and celebrity of the house, the skill and affluence of the trader, or the prejudices or necessities of the customers. This, therefore, is not a tangible interest. It is not a commodity on which a specific value can be placed, or for which a definite allowance can be made. Therefore, upon the death of one partner, it is not stock of which'the executor of a deceased partner can compel a division, unless he can also compel a ■ sale of the whole premises and stock, as in the case of a partnership at will. Under these latter circumstances, however, the good-will would accompany the rest of the stock, and might create some additional speculative value in the mind of a purchaser. Accordingly, a court of equity, in this and similar cases, would so treat it that its value should be felt and appreciated by all parties interested in the concern; and therefore, in decreeing a sale of the entire partnership, would order the sale to be so adjusted as to give full effect to the value of the good-will.”
In Musselman and Clarkson’s Appeal, 62 Pa. St., 81, was considered the term "good-will” as applicable under the following condition of facts A banking firm had dissolved and appointed a partner to liquidate, who, immediately following the dissolution, commenced banking in the firm house on his own account, under the firm name, at the same time settling the firm business there. Thompson, C. J., for the court, said that there was no doubt that if under these circumstances this partner had sold the “goodwill” he would have been obliged to have accounted for the value received. This opinion discussed the liability.of this partner in the following language: “Nor at law was there any obligation on him to pay for the good-will. .He did not agree to pay for it, and he did not sell it as such. Nor can I comprehend how it existed independently of the property. There was no relinquishment of business by the partners. Their business expired by its own limitation. They had no exclusive right in the business that existed for a moment after the firm dissolved, or any sole ownership of it as against any others; and these are the criteria of property in good-will according to the English rule. (Kennedy v. Lee, 3 Mer. [Eng.], 441; Coll. on Part., 156; Story on Part., 369.) But supposing the rule to be more extensive by usage with us, and I think it is, how can there be a good-will in favor of the members of a firm, where the firm has ceased by its own limitation and no exclusive right to follow the business in that place belongs to them ? In- that ease as a distinct property it is good. It
On marginal page 263 of Parsons on Partnership occurs the following language: "The executor of a deceased partner can realize the share of the deceased in the good-will only when he can compel a sale of the stock and premises, and then the good-will goes with them. Por, as a general rule, by the conveyance of a shop or store, the good-will of the business carried on in it passes, although nothing is said about the good-will. And if an executor cannot compel a sale of the.premises, or, as it seems, if the premises are not in fact sold, the executor gets no advantage from the good-will, for that remains entirely with the surviving partners who carry on the same business in the same place.” To a proper understanding of the language-used by Sir John Romilly, M. R., in Robertson v. Quiddington, 28 Beavan’s Rep. [Eng.], 529, a brief statement of the facts of the case may not be unprofitable. John Morgan and N. A. Quiddington, in- 1836, commenced carrying on a business as tailors, under the firm name of Morgan & Co. In this business Morgan had a two-thirds interest, and at his death, which occurred on the 8th day of January, 1860, John Robertson, by the terms of Morgan’s will, became entitled to two-thirds of the interest held by the testator in the good-will of the above mentioned business. On the 23d day «of June, 1860, Robertson filed a bill praying that said good-will might be sold and that plaintiff might be declared entitled to four ninth parts of the proceeds of such sale, and for an accounting by Quiddington of all profits made or received by him from the good-will of the business of Morgan & Co. since the decease of Morgan. A-demurrer to the bill was sustained on the ground of want of equity. In the consideration of this demurrer the following language was employed : “ I fully concur in the observations on both sides, not only that the good-will is a valuable and tangible thing in many cases, but it is never a
From the above consideration of principles and citations from approved text-writers, as well as adjudicated cases, it seems inevitably to result that the surviving partners of the firm of Lee, Fried & Co., in the absence of a restrictive agreement on their part, were entitled to carry on t.he same line of business as had been transacted by said firm, and at the same place, without accounting for the value of such of the good-will of said firm as thereby accrued to them. It also seems equally clear that by the purchase of the stock and .fixtures of the firm of Lee, Fried & Co. the defendants, in the absence of an express reservation to the contrary, became entitled to whatever good-will attached to the former business of said firm. It results, therefore, that the judgment of the district court is
Affirmed.