260 Mass. 453 | Mass. | 1927
The question involved in this suit in equity is the ownership of certain papers. The plaintiff is a manufacturer of hosiery. The defendants are accountants, father and son, who have been partners since January 1, 1921. In 1912 or 1913 the father, and later the firm, were employed by the plaintiff as accountants to make an annual audit, to prepare tax returns, and to perform services on matters of bookkeeping, cost accounting and statements for banks. This employment continued until December, 1925. In 1922 or 1923 the defendants were employed to conduct a Federal tax case before the bureau of internal revenue as attorneys in fact for the plaintiff. While a Federal revenue agent in January, 1926, was making an examination of the plaintiff’s returns for the years 1922, 1923, 1924, he was sent by the plaintiff to the defendants to examine certain papers in their possession relating to the plaintiff’s affairs, more particularly the defendants’ “work sheets” relating to the revaluation of the plant assets and to certain adjusted inventories developed in their work on the tax case. The defendants refused the revenue agent access to these papers. On January 6,1926, the plaintiff demanded of the defendants “all papers in your possession belonging to Ipswich Mills.” No papers were delivered and this suit was instituted.
All the papers involved which were in the defendants’ possession were produced by them at the trial. They were examined by the parties, grouped, initialled and impounded, awaiting the final decision of the case. Group A consisted of papers that originated in the plaintiff’s office or in the office of its selling agents, or of some one associated with
It was found by the trial judge that “work sheets” meant papers on which original compilations, computations and analyses are made by accountants, which later are gathered together in a summary form and the figures rendered in the schedule, exhibit, report or return upon which the aceount-ant is working. The judge ruled that the plaintiff was the owner of the papers in groups B, C, D and E, and entitled to the immediate possession of them, the defendants being entitled to take and preserve such photostatic copies as they desired. With reference to the papers initialled F, the judge ruled that the parties were jointly interested in these particular papers, with the right in the plaintiff to take them temporarily from the defendants. An order for a decree was made. The case was then reported to this court.
Concerning the papers marked B, which consist of “copy of amended Federal tax return of the plaintiff for 1918 and certain papers (not work sheets) relating thereto,” the judge found “the defendants were under employ as accountants, — auditing, checking up and verifying, and making a research for the original costs of the plaintiff’s plant assets then in use and applying depreciation figures decided upon by the directors with respect to the different classes of property. It was work of a character requiring accounting skill and experience, and good judgment in reaching sound and depend
Group C consisted of (1) carbon copies of letters from the defendants to the plaintiff; (2) original letters from the plaintiff to the defendants; (3) original letters to the defendants from the plaintiff’s attorneys; and (4) carbon copies of letters from the defendants to the collector of internal revenue.
The carbon copies of the defendants’ letters to the plaintiff were the property of the defendants. The plaintiff did not own these copies and was not entitled to their possession. The contract of employment did not require the defendants to furnish these copies to the plaintiff.
The carbon copies of the defendants’ letters to the collector of internal revenue did not belong to the plaintiff. Whatever right it may have to examine these copies, or take copies of them, which point we are not called upon to decide, the defendants’ copies did not belong to the plaintiff; they were owned by the defendants. The fact that the copies of these letters concern the plaintiff is not a sufficient reason for depriving the defendants of their property. In writing the letters the defendants were not the plaintiff’s servants.
In Group C there are copies of Federal tax returns. These, as we understand from the record, were the defendants’ office copies. The record shows that copies of all returns and schedules prepared by the defendants for the plaintiff were sent to the plaintiff. Even if the plaintiff has a right to require further copies, a question not‘involved in this suit, it has no right to demand of the defendants the surrender of these office copies. They were the property of the defendants.
The worksheets, as defined by the trial judge, were the
With reference to Group F, the letters addressed to the defendants, copies of letters written by the defendants,
On the record of the evidence disclosed in this case, the defendants were under no legal obligation to surrender their working sheets or other papers to the plaintiff. The testimony of Leonard and Dillon does not prove that the defendants gave the plaintiff any right or title in them. It is apparent that at one time papers in the possession of the defendants, including their working papers, were turned over to the plaintiff, for which receipts were given by the plaintiff to the defendants. These papers were again returned to the defendants. The plaintiff contends that by this transaction the plaintiff’s rights of property and possession of all these papers were settled. Dillon testified that these papers were merely lent to the plaintiff. An investigation of the letters and receipts, and an examination of the record, do not satisfy us that the defendants in placing these documents in the possession of the plaintiff intended to part with their title and property in them.
It follows that the papers in Group A belong to .the plaintiff. The other papers and documents belong to the defendants. A decree is to be entered for the plaintiff, directing that the plaintiff is the owner and entitled to immediate possession of the documents described in Group A.
Ordered accordingly.