47 Mich. 309 | Mich. | 1882
Richardson brought his bill to procure a. partnership accounting, arising out of a log-running contract, for running logs for the Riñe Boom Company in 1879. In, 1878 and 1879 Welch obtained a contract, and Richardson and Floyd were to have equal shares in the pi’ofits, the>. former advancing money, and the latter performing services. The business for 1878 was all closed. Welch received the?
It appears affirmatively that no fraud was actually intended or practiced; that the complainant had nothing to do with determining who among the various bidders should have the contract; that the work was done more satisfactorily than ever before; and the interests of the contractors and of the boom company would in the main, if not entirely, be advanced by the same course of business.
It is not denied that there was impropriety in the conduct of Richardson in becoming interested in such a contract with his own company -without their knowledge. It is not now necessary to consider how far this might have stood in the way had this been a suit against the boom company to recover pay for the work done. But payment has been made in full by that corporation, and no'complaint has been interposed to recover it back in whole or in part for the irregularity now asserted. It appears very clearly that the company has lost nothing and has in no way been injured. The defendant Welch, who has received money which he agreed to pay over to the complainant, is now seeking to defend, not for any actual or constructive fraud against himself, but because the complainant has done something which inflicted a theoretical but not an actual injury on a stranger to the partnership.
There is no ground for claiming that the action of Richardson was illegal in the sense of violating any public statute, or that it was absolutely void. At most it was a constructive fraud against his employers who might either have authorized it, or ratified it, or condoned it. It was certainly no more than voidable and had there been actual fraud whereby Richardson would have profited at the expense of the company it is possible the corporation might have claimed to be subrogated to his rights in the partnership.
The rule is general that when contracts are legal except as against persons in adverse interest, courts will not listen to complaints of persons not injured. Conveyances fraudulent as against creditors can only be attacked by creditors, and the principle is general as applied to private frauds. It is no doubt competent for courts of equity to use some discretion when asked to become instruments in helping parties to the fruits of fraud. But in the present case no actual fraud appears, and the fruits of the fraud, if it existed, are all in the hands of Welch. Under such circumstances he is estopped from using his own participation in the bargain as a pretext for defrauding his associates. It cannot help the boom company to have him retain money which does not belong to him, nor can it hurt that company to have bim pay it to Richardson. We have found no support for such a doctrine as he contends for. Even in cases where public and not merely private interests were involved, courts have refused to relieve parties who had the money of other people in their hands, against accounting, when there was no question of public uolicy to be involved in that transaction. See Willson v. Owen 30 Mich. 474, and eases there cited.
The defense is not well founded and cannot be sustained.
Complainant is entitled to a decree declaring the assets of the partnership in Welch’s hands on the 1st day of January, 1880, to have been for proceeds of the business less expenditures $10,195.77 and personal property $1200 which he has converted. Complainant is entitled to one-third of this siim total after deducting $1000 for Floyd’s services, to which Floyd is entitled, or one-third of $10,395.77, being $3465.25 with interest from January 1, 1880.
A decree must be entered on this basis with costs of both courts, and the cause remanded for the enforcement of the decree.