122 F. 561 | 9th Cir. | 1903
after stating the case as above, delivered the opinion of the court.
The appellee contends that the court on this appeal is precluded from entering into a consideration of the question of fact presented in the record, for the reason that the appeal was not taken within io days from the date when the District Court passed upon that question as it was presented to him on the petition of Lake. But the record does not show that any order or judgment was made by the District Court upon that hearing. It is true that the District Judge filed an opinion which is reported in Re Clark, 111 Fed. 893, but nothing further was done, and the conclusion of the court was never placed in the form of a judgment. The first and only judgment that was entered in that court was the judgment of June 10, 1902, from which the present appeal was taken. Until that date there was nothing from which an appeal could be taken.
The only question which we find it necessary to consider in this case is whether or not E. W. H. Lake was á silent partner in the firm of Clark & Reiter. The referee in bankruptcy, before whom the witnesses appeared and testified, found that he was a partner. The District Court was of the. opinion that the evidence was not sufficient to sustain that finding. We have carefully examined the testimony. We think it clearly shows that both Reiter and Clark considered that Lake was a secret partner in the firm. In the spring of 1899, Lake was and still is the owner of a retail dry goods store in Atchison, Kan., and Clark had been for several years his intimate friend. Clark was then the buyer and manager for the Western Coal & Mining Company at Pittsburg, Kan. Reiter was employed at Deer Lodge, Mont. He and Clark were “old friends.” On April 26, 1899, Clark wrote to Reiter a letter which contained the following:
“Now in regard to our business I have been up to Atchison this week and-have had a long talk with Lake. Lake is not on the road. He is making a barrel of money in the retail business. Lake would like to take an interest with us and is willing to take my word for it. We could arrange to get almost any kind of a deal. If there is an opening suitable here could put in a good-sized stock but of this I can’t form an opinion. Now I think it would be a good idea to take him in for several reasons which will readily occur to you. If you think desirable to go into that new country, you would not need a very large stock to begin with. I can’t get what means I have before July or August but if you are satisfied with this proposition why go ahead. I will take your judgment for it. Lake and I will furnish $1000.00 in cash and you put in $500 as equal partners. You allow yourself a salary to be governed by what there is in the business; we will help all we can on this end of the line. We are willing to put this into anything that you say is right.”
There was other correspondence between Clark and Reiter which is not in the record. According to Reiter’s testimony, the negotiations between them culminated in an understanding, whereby, as he-understood it from Clark, Clark, Reiter, and Lake were, in case a favorable location were found, to open a store in some town in the
Clark, it is true, denied that Rake was a partner, and testified that the money and goods put into the business by Rake were a loan, and not a contribution to the capital of the firm. His testimony is contradictory and unsatisfactory, and, in our opinion, manifests a disposition to shield Rake from liability. He testified that Rake never agreed to be a partner, and he explained his letter of April 26, 1899, above quoted, by saying that what he wrote were the vaporings of his imagination. But he also testified that in all his dealings with Rake and Reiter he had been honest with both. But the facts speak in plainer terms than Clark’s denials and explanations. The business of Clark & Reiter was started at Spokane by buying out the stock of goods of Rouis Budde, who was in business at that place. There were no partnership articles of the firm of Clark & Reiter. Reiter contributed $900 to the firm’s capital, Clark contributed $1,400, and Rake remitted by drafts $2,400, and sent a large consignment of goods
“Dear George: I have had nothing from you since I left. I am now here picking out some stuff, and will go to St Joe today. You will have to make that transfer with old man Budde. We will send you money to make the transfer with. Now, we want you to take stuff as near as possible as follows, etc. * * * Don’t let the old man work you. We will send you money next week so that you can close it up. I would like to have had you here, but we thought the expense too much. * » * Will write you tomorrow; am in a hurry. The firm name will be Clark & Reiter. Our capital will be $8000.00. Bake is carrying me for the balance of the stock. I am pledging him my credit. I will try your share in this satisfactory; I think you will be satisfied with the deal.”
The opinion of the District Court seems to have been largely influenced by the last few lines of the letter just quoted, and the court remarked that this was at least a plain notice to Reiter that the plan of the partnership first proposed had not been carried into effect, and that Lake had become a creditor of Clark. With deference to the opinion of the learned District Judge, we take a different view of the meaning of these words. The statement that “our capital will be $8,000” seems to us a plain declaration that the amount which was to be contributed to the capital of the partnership by the partners was $8,000, and that the further statement that “Lake is carrying me for the balance of the stock. I am pledging him my credit” means that Lake was to loan the funds necessary to purchase merchandise, over and above that which could be bought with the $8,000 capital of the partnership. This interpretation is sustained by the facts. The firm, according to its statement to Burnham, Hanna, Munger & Co., of Kansas City, of date August 9, 1899, which statement was made for the “purpose of obtaining credit,” opened business at Spokane with merchandise representing at actual cost $14,000, and Lake did in fact loan to the firm in the fall of 1899 and the spring of 1900, before the dissolution o.f the firm, sums amounting to $3,800, for which he took th.e notes of the firm. On July 9th, Clark wrote from Lake’s store to Reiter as follows:
“I received your letter of the 3rd. * * * I have your wire in regard to the Boston store. If that stock is going to be sold in a lump we want to bid on it. Bind out and let us know. Use the wire if it is to be sold. We would not ship stuff already picked out. I enclose bill for thread which will show you what we should pay for it.”
The telegram referred to in this letter was one which Reiter had sent informing Clark of the proposed sale of the stock of the Boston
“Your wire received. As I have had no letter I can’t guess just what you have in view. I am going ahead to get out stuff at any rate. I don’t exactly understand the reasons for that failure. What became of the stock? If it is on the market to be bought outright, we are in it up to 50 to 55 cts. on the dollar of inventory. Let me know about this to Atchison. Use the wire if necessary. Better address Lake for X may not be here. I am doing the best I can to get things ready for a fair start and hope you will be satisfied. Will write you tomorrow.”
On the same day Clark wrote to Reiter:
“I note the stuff you have selected. You did not select any wide sheetings. These goods are clean out of sight and we should have them. We are sending you today exchange for $1000.00 to pay old man Budde on the 15th and try to have him extend the time (by contract) till August 1st. If he will not do this in a legal way, send us a wire as soon as you know and we will arrange to pay the balance before the 20th as per contract. Address all correspondence to me in care Lake for the present. * * * I received your wire about the Boston store and wrote you fully in regard to it. We expect a letter at Atchison from you today. This may enlighten us somewhat. I wired you Saturday in regard to putting in some clothing but have not heard from you.”
On August 9, 1899, for the purpose of obtaining credit with Burn-ham, Hanna, Hunger & Co., of Kansas City, Clark made a statement of “present true financial circumstances,” as a basis of credit with that firm, in which he placed the merchandise of Clark & Reiter at $14,000 actual cost, and listed the liabilities of the firm, consisting of sums owing to various wholesale houses, and $700 borrowed from a bank, aggregating in all $4,930, and placed the total worth' of the firm, over and above all liabilities and exemptions, at $9,000. There was no mention made of Lake in this statement, or of any liability to him. Clark explains this omission in the statement, and in all the,, other statements he gave of the assets and liabilities of the firm, by saying that he knew that Lake would not press the firm for the debt which was owing him, and he attempts to explain the use of the plural “we” and “us” in the extracts from the letters above quoted by saying that, while he was manager and buyer for the coal company, he had become so accustomed to use the plural that by inadvertence he used it when he should have used the pronouns “I” and “me.” This explanation does not seem to us either probable or reasonable. It will be noticed that in these letters Clark always used the first person singular when he was referring to himself and his own movements, and that he never used the plural except in cases where, if it were true that Lake was a partner, it was proper to use the plural. Upon the theory that Lake was a partner in the firm, there is not a single instance of the misuse of pronouns anywhere in his letters.
But it is not enough that Clark and Reiter both supposed and understood that Lake was a partner, or that they so conducted their correspondence or made entries on their books as to indicate that he was. There must be other evidence of the fact before Lake can be found to be interested as a secret partner in the firm. The evidence tending to show that he was so interested is in this case, as in most
“We have a fall order for Mr. Clark amounting to nearly §2000.00, and it has been suggested to us that you were financially interested as a silent partner or in some such way. You know I will keep any information you might give us strictly confidential; and that all X care about is to assure myself of Mr. Clark’s responsibility.”
—Lake answered:
“As you probably know I have a very high opinion of Mr. Clark’s business ability, and think a great deal of him. I have done all I could to help him get a start and he has built up a very fine trade there in a short time, and think he is going to make a big success. I know he is honest and reliable, and believe he will pay what he contracts to. He had about eight or nine thousand dollars to start out there. As far as Mr. Eeiter going out of the firm is concerned, it cuts no figure, as he only had about §400 in there.”
This letter does not exhibit Lake in a favorable light. Aside from his silence when directly asked the question whether he was a silent partner in the firm, and his failure to furnish information of his own claim against Clark, which, at that time, according to his present contention, was in the neighborhood of $10,000, the letter “contains two distinct misstatements of facts. One is the statement that Reiter had only about $400 in the firm. Lake, in his testimony, admits that this was not true; that he knew Reiter had put $900 in the firm. Another is the statement—which, if Lake were not a partner, was also untrue—that Clark “had about eight or nine thousand dollars to start out there.” No one, we think, can examine the testimony in this case and believe that Lake ever at any time believed that either Clark or Clark & Reiter together had, aside from what he furnished them, $8,000 or $9,000 to start with. Nowhere in his testimony does he claim that any portion of the money and goods which he sent to the firm at the time when it commenced business was included in this capital of “eight or nine thousand dollars.” On the contrary, he attempts to justify the statement contained in his letter by testifying that it was his understanding that at the time of the formation of the partnership Clark had property of the value of between six and seven thousand dollars, consisting in stock in a flour-
Although frequent letters passed between Clark and Lake, they both testified that all letters have been destroyed, and that no copies have been kept. These letters, if preserved, would undoubtedly show what the true relation was between Clark and Lake. The fact that they were not preserved is a circumstance to be taken into the account.
The appellee produced the testimony of his wife and his brother-in-law, who each testified, in substance, that about the 1st of June, 1899, Lake remarked to them separately, but in Clark’s presence, that Clark had requested him to become a partner with him in business, but that he had refused. Conceding it to be true that these remarks were made by Clark, it does not necessarily follow that they were made in good faith, nor does it follow that prior to that time Lake had not held out assurances to Clark such as to justify the latter in writing the letter of April 29, 1899, or that later, about the middle of June of that year, when Clark was again at Atchison, Lake had not changed his mind and agreed to engage in the enterprise as a partner. We think the evidence is sufficient to justify us in finding that Lake was a partner, as found by the referee.
The judgment of the District Court will be reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with the foregoing opinion.
1. Appeal and review in bankruptcy cases, see note to In re Eggert, 43 C. C. A. 9.