109 F. 798 | 9th Cir. | 1901
after stating the facts, delivered the opinion of the court.
It will he seen from the foregoing statement of facts that the only question to be determined by this court upon this appeal is whether or not Fannie J. Lott and Lemuel W. Nixon, or either of them, were partners in the Silver City Mercantile Company. This being the only issue, it is necessary at the outset to determine what facts a,re necessary to be proven in order to constitute a co-partnership. Samuel Nixon having made default, and Samuel M. Nixon having been found to he a partner and taking no appeal from such finding, it stands admitted that they were co-partners doing business under the firm name of the Silver City Mercantile Company. It is also admitted that the mercantile company had committed acts of bankruptcy prior to the institution of these proceedings. There is no pretense that there ever were any written articles of co-partnership, or any division of profits between Fannie J. Lott and Lemuel W. Nixon, or either of them, and the other parties. In fact, there is no direct evidence of any such partnership, so far as they are concerned. They a re sought to he held as partners by circumstantial evidence of their acts and conduct in relation to the business of the mercantile company. Appellees admit that they have been unable to prove any details of the alleged partnership, or any evidence whatever as to
“To prove a secret partnership arrangement and fraudulent transactions among parties, it is impossible to prove all tlieir specific acts and exact words, with the details of time and place of forming the secret understanding; and courts allow a wide latitude in the introduction of evidence, and receive as evidence every act and word having a tendency to prove any secret understanding between parties. For that reason we call the attention of the court to parts of the record disclosing many facts, any one of which alone might be insufficient to prove the case of petitioners, but, when taken together, lead irresistibly to the conclusion reached by the trial court.”
We can readily imagine cases where this statement might have some application and force, but we apprehend that in all cases there must be some evidence tending to show the main fact. The mere fact that a man is shown to be an embezzler and a criminal — a man wholly unworthy of belief — does not tend to show that he is a partner in the Silver City Mercantile Company. A man or a woman may have entered into a conspiracy with the man or men proven to be the owners of the goods belonging to the mercantile company, to hinder, delay, and defraud the creditors, without being a member of that firm. The mere fact of such a conspiracy might be sufficient to establish fraud, but not to prove a partnership. What constitutes a co-partnership? The general rule may be stated as follows: A co-partnership is a voluntary contract between two or more competent persons to place their money, effects, labor, and skill, or some or all of them, in lawful commerce or business, with the understanding that there shall be a communion of the profits thereof between them. A partnership exists where parties join together their money, goods, labor, or skill for the purposes of trade or gain, and where there is a community of profits. As these proceedings were instituted in Montana, we naturally look to the statutes of that state, to see whether Or not they have any particular bearing upon this subject. The definition of a có-partnership is given in sections 3180 and 3181 of the Civil Code (1 Ann. Codes Mont. 1895, p. 1252) as follows:
“Sec. 3180. Partnership is the association of two or more persons for the purpose of carrying on business together, and dividing its profits between them.
“Sec. 3181. A partnership can be formed only by the consent of all the parties thereto, and therefore no new partner can be admitted into a partnership without the consent of every existing member thereof.”
Prior to the adoption of this Code the supreme court of the territory, in Parchen v. Anderson, 5 Mont. 438, 5 Pac. 588, following the decision in Wheatcroft v. Hickman, 99 E. C. L. 47, 8 H. L. Cas. 268, declared that where there is no partnership inter se there can be none as to third persons, unless the party sought to be held as a partner has by his acts put himself in such a position that he is estopped from denying that he is a partner; that the weight of modern authority is that the mere sharing of profits, although cogent evidence of a partnership, is not conclusive, so as to make him who receives such profits a partner in the business or enterprise by which they are earned. This decision became the rule of the common law of Montana, and the statute of the state virtually adopted the rule established-by that decision.
“It is hereby agreed to and'between Samuel Nixon, of Butte, Mont, party of the first part, and Samuel 1\1. Nixon, of the same place, party of the second iKirt: Witnesselh, that whereas the party of the first part is owner and proprietor of that certain general merchandise business known as the Silver City Mercantile Company, situated at 457 East Park street; witnesseth, that as the party of the first part is desirous of continuing the above business* and does by this contract hire and employ the party of the second part, for the term of three years from the third day of January, eighteen hundred and ninety-eight, as general manager, to conduct the business of the said Samuel Nixon both in the state of Montana and elsewhere; witnesseth, that the party of the second part is to receive as salary two hundred dollars ($200.00) per month, commencing January 3rd, 1808. Further, the said party of the second part is to receive one-half or 50% of the gross profits of the general merchandise business as shown by the books of the said Silver City Merc. Co. (Samuel Nixon). It is further agreed that the party of the second part is to have the exclusive rigid to purchase all goods, and have exclusive control of the business at 457 East Park street, or at any other place that said business may be moved to. It is further agreed that this contract is irrevocable, but may be abrogated by tlio party of the second part at any time that he can better himself financially with any other house or firm.”
Lemuel W. Mxon and Fannie J. Lott, were not parties to this agreement. Neither of them, had anything whatever to do with the organization of the firm. It is not claimed that they did. When, then, did they ever become co-partners, if at all? Samuel Mxon, the father, had been engaged in mercantile business for several years. Samuel M. Nixon had been engaged as a mercantile broker, buying and selling goods, and understood the business. He was the manager of the store, and was entitled, by the terms of the agreement, to one-half of the profits over and above his salary of §200 per month. It may be presumed from the testimony that L. W. Mxon had at that time but little, if any, knowledge of mercantile business. About May 1, 1898, he was employed as a clerk by the Silver City Mercantile Company, lie worked one month without any salary. The next month he received §10, then for two months he got §75 per month, then his salary was raised to §85 per month, and during the months of April, May, and June he received §100 per month. , These facts are undisputed. In March, 1899, one S. O. Ashby was appointed a trustee in bankruptcy of the Clarke & Talbott stock of goods in South Butte. Sealed proj)osals for the sale thereof were requested, and on the 32th day of April, 3899, he sold the stock of goods, through S. M. Nixon, to the Silver City Mercantile Company, for §1,404.50, which was paid by check signed by said mercantile company on Marcus Daly & Co.’s bank. The mercantile company immediately took possession of these goods, and conducted the store in South Bui,to up to July 3, 3899, when it sold the remaining stock of goods in the store to L. W. Nixon for §3,825.24, and he took possession thereof July 11th. S. M. Mxon testified that the mercantile company kept
“After my brother bought out that stock the Silver Oity Mercantile Company did business with him the same as we would with any other firm or men. Our books disclosed the goods we sold to him, and the money he paid, and they correctly set forth the transactions as they occurred between us.”
After L. W. Nixon took possession of the store he opened up a full set of books, and kept a bank account with Clark Bros. During the time he run the store the books show that he paid the Silver City Mercantile Company $12,160 for goods bought from said company, and paid over $2,500 for goods bought from other parties. The goods he bought were paid for in checks, except the sum of $724.15, which he paid in cash taken out of the register. It is contended by appellees that there is a discrepancy of about $4,000 between the amount of goods sold by the Silver City Mercantile Company to L. W. Nixon, as shown by his day book, and the amount shown by the ledger of the company. This appellants deny, and claim that the books of both concerns are in entire harmony; that the confusion arises because of the fact that the items were not' always entered in the same order. Be that as it may; appellees admit’that separate accounts were kept between the two stores. Counsel say:
“We do not doubt that books were kept or prepared for the East Park street store and the South Butte store in such a manner as to give some appearance of separate and distinct interests. They had ample time and opportunity to prepare such records. * * * It was an easy matter to go through the form of keeping pretended separate accounts of the business.”
Some reliance seems to be made upon the fact that L. W. Nixon, as shown by his books, drew out from his business various sums of money, aggregating over $4,000, during one month. Appellants claim that this matter is satisfactorily explained. We need not stop to determine this point. As long as L. W. Nixon paid for the goods he bought, it was nobody’s business whát amount of money he drew out from the business he was conducting in his own name. The fact of his drawing out large sums of money certainly does not tend to show that he must have been a partner in the Silver City Mercantile Company. There is no testimony, and no pretense on the part of the appellees, that he divided any of this money, as a dividend or otherwise, with the mercantile company.
There is another line of testimony relied upon by appellees, which, they earnestly argue, tends to connect L. W. Nixon as a partner in the mercantile company. This consists of the declarations made by S. M. Nixon and others that the mercantile company had three stores. These declarations were not made in the presence of L. W. Nixon or Fannie J. Lott, and were admitted upon the promise and assurance of appellees that they would connect him and her as partners. No such testimony is found in the record. The declarations of S. M. Nixon were admissible to bind him as a partner, and, in our opinion,
Another line of testimony is in regard to certain inventories that were taken of the goods at the time of the seizure by the marshal of the Centerville and East Bark street stores, showdng a much larger quantity of goods in each than had been accounted for by goods bought. The reliability of these inventories is seriously questioned by appellants; hut, for the purposes of this case, if admitted to he true, it does not tend to show that there existed between L. W. Nixon and Fannie J. Lott any co-partnership with the other Nixons or the mercantile company. L. W. Nixon is styled hv appellees “as the past master in the art of romancing.” lie testified, among other things, that he amassed a fortune of over §20,000 in Guatemala by smuggling and stealing, and carried this amount on his person for years in §1,000 bills, etc. Me claims to have loaned Mrs. Fannie J. Lott over §7,000 to enable her to buy the Centerville store. Tt is claimed that L. W. Nixon had no money, and that he could not have loaned that amount and other amounls to Mrs. Lott. It is said he is unworthy of belief. In the next breath it is claimed that he is an embezzler. If so, he was liable to have had enough money to make the loan. But, if he had no money, from whom did Mrs. Lott get the money? Her books and other evidence show that she deposited in the Silver Bow National Bank the sum of §7,667.99 during the months of October, November, and December, and that she paid by checks on this bank to the Silver City Mercantile Company the sum of $4,909. She also bought goods from other parties. How much, is not shown. The record shows that the Lott family were in California prior to October, 1899, and that they did not come to Butte, Mont., until the latter part of that month. Mrs. Lott could not become a partner in the mercantile company without the consent of all the partners. There is no testimony from which any inference can be drawn that either Samuel Nixon or Samuel M. Nixon ever gave his consent.
It would serve no useful purpose to further mention the details of the evidence. It is enough to say that in its entirety it follows closely the line of the general averments in the amended petition,-— that the defendants had entered into a consi>iracy and colluded together for the purpose of hindering, delaying, and defrauding the creditors of the Silver City Mercantile Company. We decline to express any opinion upon its sufficiency or insufficiency to establish a conspiracy for that purpose, because that is a question of fact fox* a jury to determine. Appellants both testify that their transactions were bona fide, and claim the goods in their respective stores to be their own property. It may or may not he sufficient to justify the petitioning creditors in having the trustee in bankruptcy institute proceedings under the bankruptcy act to recover the goods on the ground that the same were obtained by fraud and collusion, for the sole pur