5 Mo. App. 557 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1878
delivered the opinion of the court.
In November, 1871, Thomas J. Yastine, since deceased, and the defendant Samuel L. Sturges formed a copartnership in the commission business. In the articles, it was provided that the copartnership should continue for the term of five years, “with condition, however,” that it should not expire upon the death of Yastine, but should be continued as before, until the expiration of the said term of five years, for the benefit of his three children, the present defendants Charles, Sarah, and Hannah Yastine. Other stipulations were as follows : “ The said party of the first part (Sturges) shall devote and give all his time, attention, and skill asa merchant to the management, care, and superintendence of the business of the said firm; and the said party of the second part (Yastine), in consideration therefor, has given into the capital stock of the said business the
The partner Yastine died in March, 1872. After that event, his three children named in the articles, defendants in the present suit, drew from the concern, which was carried on, as before, under the style of “ S. L. Sturges & Co.,” until its failure, the sum of $70 per month. This was for about two years. During that period, the indebtedness on open account was created, which is the foundation of the present suit. The Circuit Court, sitting as a jury, heard the testimony, and gave judgment for the plaintiffs. The question presented in this appeal is, whether the defendants Yastine can be held liable as partners with defendant Sturges.
It is argued for the Yastines, that, in their relations with Sturges, essential elements of a partnership are wanting ; that the original partnership was dissolved by the death of T. J. Yastine, and these defendants could not be brought into a new one without their own consent, which consent they never gave; that the mere receipt of a monthly stipend, provided by the bounty of their deceased father, could not, in any sense, make them partners ; that no other fact, nor any agreement whatever, connected them with the business conducted by Sturges, with whom they never had any communication, except in the receipt of the $70 per month.
It is not clear how the defendants can deny any acceptance of the partnership interest bestowed by the elder Vastine, when they have accepted all its products as fully as he did or could by the original articles. He was a silent partner. He died before the first semi-annual period for a division of profits; and it does not appear that any profits were ever made to be divided, either before or after his death. His participation in the affairs of the concern appears to have consisted wholly in the withdrawing of $70 per month from its resources. His manifest design in the framing of the articles was that the defendants Vastine should be his successors. According to the testimony, they have filled that capacity as honestly as they could.
Defendants urge that a community of profits is essential to the composition of a partnership, and add that in this case there were no profits whereof a community could be enjoyed. Learned counsel are of course aware that it is not the fact of profits realized, but the right in them, if realized, to which this community applies. If actual profits were necessary, no unsuccessful association would be a partnership. But suppose that profits had been realized, will it be asserted that before these defendants called for their semi
There is nothing in the objection that a monthly allowance does not make a partner. The allowance in the present case was a feature in an admitted partnership. It was not a specific and independent allowance provided by the deceased for his children, but came to them, if at all, as inseparable from the partnership. In accepting one they accepted both.
The judgment is affirmed.