192 F. 907 | 6th Cir. | 1912
This is a proceeding by Charles F. Rug-gles, of the late partnership of Ruggles & Buckley, to recover of the profits which accrued to the assets of said partnership after it had been dissolved by the decree of the Circuit Court on March 15, 1906, and while in the hands of a receiver, in the proportion that his alleged share of the assets in said partnership bore to the share of Edward Buckley. By the decree it was adjudged that Ruggles & Buckley was a partnership, and that each partner should share equally in the net assets thereof; that the amount due from the partnership and from Buckley to complainant, Ruggles, at the date of said decree, was $1,278,396.28. It was also decreed that the moneys which should come into the hands of the receiver, as provided in said decree, in so far as they should belong to said partnership, and the moneys received from the sale of partnership assets, as therein provided, should immediately, upon the receipt thereof, be paid to said Ruggles (a) until he should have received the sum of $696,379.36, being the balance found due to Ruggles on advancements made by him to the partnership;. (b) and if there should be a surplus remaining, the re
Execution of the decree of March 15, 1906, was suspended by both parties prosecuting an appeal to this court. Defendant, Buckley, perfected his appeal April 25, 1906, by executing necessary supersedeas bond, etc. At a later date complainant, Ruggles, perfected his appeal from said decree. The decree of the Circuit Court was affirmed. Ruggles v. Buckley, 158 Fed. 950, 86 C. C. A. 154.
The petition in this proceeding was filed by Ruggles March 31, 1910, and the specific relief sought is thus stated in the third paragraph of the prayer of the petition:
“Tbat your petitioners shall be decreed to be entitled to receive, and there shall be awarded to your petitioner, from the undistributed proceeds of the assets of the partnership, a share of the profits earned subsequent to the said date when the execution of the final decree was suspended, apportioned to his share in the assets of the partnership at that date.”
The defendant, Buckley, filed an answer thereto. After hearing, arid on the 12th day of October, 1910, the Circuit Court denied the relief prayed for in the petition. From this decree, the complainant, Ruggles, has prosecuted an appeal to this court, and assigned errors.
It appears that on or about April 27, 1909, the entire amount, $1,278,396.28, which had been decreed Ruggles March .15, 1906, had been paid. Thus it will be seen that 37 months elapsed from the date of the final decree in the Circuit Court until Ruggles was paid the full amount decreed to him thereunder, except his one-half interest in the assets of the partnership remaining after paying these decreed liabilities. During this time the assets of the partnership, which were in a receiver’s hands, earned something more than $500,000.
It is insisted by the appellant that since the decree of March 15, 1906, was suspended on the filing of a supersedeas bond, April 25, 1906, by Buckley, resulting in considerable delay in the execution thereof, that he is entitled to share in the profits which have accrued to the assets of the partnership since the date of the execution of the supersedeas bond by Buckley, in proportion to his alleged share of the partnership assets, by which the profits accrued. The effect of this insistence is to ask at this late date that the original decree be modified, and the terms of the partnership as there found changed.
To this proposition we cannot assent. The rights of the parties were fixed by the decree of the Circuit Court of March 15, 1906, which was, in substance, that Ruggles and Buckley were equal partners in the firm of Ruggles & Buckley, and that after paying to Rug-gles the several amounts decreed to him, hereinbefore stated, the re
‘‘Such delay as lias happened has been under the order of the court, and In the execution of its decree, and must be presumed to be lawful.”
Moreover, such delay as has occurred in the execution of the original decree is not entirely chargeable to the defendant, since both parties appealed from said original decree. The. record, -in this case shows that the petitioner herein has litigated other1 questions arising in the case, and for the delay that has occurred the petitioner has been as culpable in relation thereto as has the defendant, if, indeed, there has been any culpability on the part of either.
Not only so, but the petition herein, although not so termed by the pleader, nevertheless, is in the nature of a petition to review the final decree in Ruggles v. Buckley, 158 Fed. 950, 86 C. C. A. 154, and to modify the same. The result there reached is the law of this case. The Circuit Court in denying the petition of the complainant herein was executing said final decree and administering' the rights of the parties thereunder upon the mandate of this court affirming the decree of the Circuit Court. In the opinion in Kimberly v. Arms (C. C.) 40 Fed. 551, Mr. Justice Jackson, when on the circuit, fully discussed the question involved here, and cited a number of authorities. See, also, Illinois v. I. C. R. R. Co., 184 U. S. 77, 22 Sup. Ct. 300, 46 L. Ed. 440, and note.
Counsel for the defendant in their brief make application to this court to order the complainant to pay the defendant an attorney’s or solicitor’s fee sufficient to reimburse the defendant for the costs incident to his defense on this appeal. We see nothing in the record that would warrant us in granting such application, and the same is denied.
The case is affirmed, with costs, and will be remanded for further proceedings, not inconsistent with this opinion.