180 P. 580 | Utah | 1919
This was an action brought by the plaintiffs in the district court of Salt Lake comity for the partition of certain real property, mineral land, situated near the town of Bingham, in said county. All of the parties originally interested in the property are deceased, and the parties to the action are the executors of their respective estates.
The complaint, in substance, alleges: That John Sharp, Jr., died seized of lot No. 205, the Golden Era mining claim, containing an area of 3.93 acres; that during their lifetime John Sharp, Sr., and his two sons, John Sharp, Jr., and James Sharp, on September 24, 1889, entered into a written agreement and declaration as follows:
“First. That we are partners and joint owners in all the property we hold in our joint or several names, or otherwise, excepting our homesteads, which are hereinafter described. 'Said properties so held jointly consist of lands and appurtenances, money, stocks, bonds, and other personal property, whether in this territory or elsewhere; and such ownership of said joint property is in the proportion following, to wit: The said John Sharp of all said partnership or joint property is owner of an undivided one-half thereof, and said John Sharp, Jr., and the said James Sharp are the owners of the other undivided one-half of said joint property; and each of them, the said John Sharp, Jr., and James Sharp hold and own the following proportions, viz. John Sharp, Jr., % of said undivided one-half, and James Sharp % of said undivided one-half. And we and each of us agree to hold the same as partners and joint tenants during our lives and until the decease of one or more, when the partnership property is to he appraised and divided in the proportions aforesaid. And in case of the death of*265 either of us the children of the one deceased shall inherit his share. Our homesteads now- occupied by us, respectively, or our families, and which are not joint or partnership property, are owned and described as follows, to wit: [Describing.] * * * ” (Italics ours.)
“And it is further mutually agreed between us that during the continuance of this partnership that our respective families and ourselves will live from the proceeds and income of our joint property and joint earnings, and no account will ever bq taken thereof; and upon the dissolution of the. copartnership the joint property will be divided as aforesaid with regard to the amount used by either of us.”
The prayer is for partition by sale of the Golden Era mining claim, and that the proceeds thereof be distributed according to the respective interests of the parties.
v The amended answer of the defendant executors for the estate of John Sharp, Jr., deceased, admits all the allegations of the complaint, except it is denied that the estate of John Sharp, Sr., has any interest in the Golden Era mining claim, other than as interested in the partnership; it is also affirmatively alleged that the copartnership affairs have not been settled nor the debts and obligations thereof paid. It is further alleged, by paragraphs numbered VII, VIII, and IX of the answer, that the estate of John Sharp, Sr., deceased, has not accounted to the estate of John Sharp, Jr., deceased, for large sums of money paid out by the latter estate on account of said partnership debts and obligations, as fully set forth by counterclaim, which said sums are in excess of the amount likely to be received from the sale of the said mining claims; further, that at the time of the death of John Sharp, Sr., there was standing in his name real property consisting of an undivided one-half interest in 2,400 acres of coal lands located in Emery county, and that the estate of John Sharp, Sr., has not accounted for the proceeds derived therefrom, consisting of 19,312 shares of the capital stock of the San Rafael Coal Company, a Corporation, and that no part of the proceeds from the sale of said mining claim should be paid to plaintiffs until plaintiffs account to defendants for said coal lands or the proceeds derived therefrom, and until settlement and accounting is had of all matters set forth in defendants’ counterclaim.
The defendants, executors of the estate of James Sharp, deceased, made answer and counterclaim of like purport and effect, and the procedure, orders and judgment of the district court with respect thereto are practically the same. Therefore the answers of the defendants, respectively, will be hereinafter referred to and regarded as one.
Upon the application of the plaintiffs all the matters contained in paragraphs VII, VIII, and IX of the amended answer were stricken out by the trial court as irrelevant and redundant. A demurrer interposed by plaintiffs to the counterclaim, on the ground that it did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, was sustained with leave to amend. Thereafter’ the defendants having failed to amend their answer, upon the application of the plaintiffs the court made and entered its findings of fact, conclusions of law, and rendered judgment on the pleadings in accordance with the prayer of the plaintiffs’ complaint, and made an order dismissing the defendants’ counterclaim.
It is,of these orders and judgment that defendants complain on appeal.
In our statement of the case we have endeavored to set forth only so much of the pleadings of the respective parties as may be necessary for a proper consideration of the questions involved. The respective rights of the parties under the pleadings are rendered somewhat complex and difficult to determine by reason of the fact that there is no allegation in the complaint or answer, including the counterclaim, as to when any of the parties to the controversy died, or as to when their respective wills were admitted to probate, or their legal representatives empowered to act. Further, the complaint is silent as to when, if ever, due notice to the creditors of John Sharp, Sr., was given. As to the defendants, it is alleged by way of answer that in the matter of the estate of John Sharp, Jr., deceased, notice was given to creditors to present their claims as late as “on or before-day
It appears from the pleadings that the entire assets of the copartnership consists of property against which there are no liens, and that there are no unsatisfied partnership obligations or claims of any nature, except the claims of the defendants for debts and obligations paid and discharged by surviving partners for the benefit of the partnership property subsequent to the death of John Sharp, Sr., and the consequent dissolution of the copartnership, and that all of the interested parties are before the court in a representative capacity.
Therefore we can see no legal objection to a sale being made, an accounting had and the pro'ceeds of sale distributed equitably to the estates of the deceased partners in
Under the provisions of the Probate Code (Comp. Laws 1917, section 7724 [3918]), ordinarily, when a partnership is dissolved by death of one of its. members,
As has been pointed out, the defendants, by their answer and counterclaim, sought for a sale of all the partnership property and an accounting predicated on the allegations of their answer and counterclaim that prior to the death of John Sharp, Sr., the partnership had incurred certain indebtedness remaining unpaid at the time of his death, and that subsequently this indebtedness had been paid and discharged by the surviving partners for the benefit of the partnership interests. The relief thus sought for was denied the defendants on the grounds (1) that the claim of the defendants was stale and inequitable, and (2) that it was not presented in time for allowance against the estate of John Sharp, Sr., pursuant to Comp. Laws 1917, section 7648 (3851), 7655 (3858), and 7671 (3874).
For our convenience we will discuss the contention made by the plaintiffs and the rulings of the trial court in the reverse order.
(A) Was it necessary for the surviving partners to present their claims in the matter of the estate of John Sharp, Sr., the deceased partner?
The statutory provisions of our Probate Code, with reference to presentation of claims against estates of deceased persons, including the above references, provide as follows:
"Sec. 7645 (3848). Every executor or administrator must, immediately after Ms appointment, cause to be published a notice to the creditors of the decedent. * * * ”
“Sec. 7648 (3851). All claims arising upon contracts, whether the same be due, not due, or contingent, must be presented within the time limited in the notice, and any claim not presented is barred forever. * * *"
*271 “Sec. 7655 (3858). No holder of any claim aaginst an estate shall maintain any action thereon unless the claim is first presented to the executor or administrator, except. * * * ”
“Sec. 7671 (3874). If there is any claim * * * contingent * * * the amount thereof or such part of the same as the holder would he entitled to if the claim were * * * established, or absolute, must be paid into the court and there remain to be paid over to the party when he becomes entitled thereto, or if he fails to establish his claim, to be paid over or distributed as the circumstances of the case require.”
As heretofore pointed out, the proceedings in this case are silent as to when John Sharp, Sr., died. There is absolutely no allegation as to the dates when his will was admitted to probate, when the executors were appointed, when they qualified, or when, if ever, any notice was given to creditors to present their claims. A careful reading of section 7671 (3874) in connection with section 7724 (3918), heretofore referred to, convinces us not only of the utter impracticability of presenting the contingent claims of surviving members of an unsettled partnership business against the estate of a, deceased partner without an accounting, but that the term ‘ ‘ contingent claim,” as employed and used in section 7671 (3874), was not intended to have any application in
The relation of partners as between themselves is a fiduciary one, that of trustee and cestui que trust, and this fiduciary relationship exists between the surviving
If the surviving partner dies before the partnership business is settled, the duty devolves upon his legal representative. Galbraith v. Tracy, 153 Ill. 54, 38 N. E. 937,
(B) Is the claim set forth in, the counterclaim barred by laches ?
Although laches is not expressly pleaded in the ease at bar, the plaintiffs contend that it appears upon the face of the answer and counterclaim of the defendants, and therefore the question is raised by their demurrer; citing Bell v. Hudson, 73 Cal. 285, 14 Pac. 791; 2 Am. St. Rep. 791; Lansdale v. Smith, 106 U. S. 391, 1 Sup. Ct. 350, 27 L. Ed. 219. Let it be conceded that the question of laches may be raised on demurrer, we think the cases cited may be very readily distinguished from the case at bar.
In the Bell Case, relied on by plaintiffs, the facts were: The partners had carried on a partnership business from
The Lansdalé Case did not involve the settlement of a partnership business, but is illustrative that demurrer will lie to a complaint seeking relief 45 years after -the cause of action arose involving title to and claiming an interest in, real property.
In the cases cited by plaintiffs, and, as we think, pracT tieálly all of the eases where the doctrine of laches has been applied by the courts, it appeared on the face of the complaint that by reason of lapse of time prejudicial changes had taken place in the conditions or relations of the property to the parties, or the parties had been prejudiced by loss of testimony or inability to make proof of the changed conditions of the property or its relation to the parties.
In the case at bar we can readily appreciate that all parties concerned in the mining property and interests involved may well have considered that it was to their mutual advantage to keep and hold the partnership property until it would command a price adequate to pay and discharge the partnership debts and liabilities, and if in the meantime the surviving partners paid and discharged the debts and liabilities out of their personal means in order to benefit the partnership business and preserve its property, then, we think, before the plaintiffs should be permitted to share in the benefits thus de
From the face of the pleadings in this action there has been practically no change in the condition of the property; the relations of both the plaintiffs and the defendants to it are precisely the same. The claims of the defendants, as set forth in their answer and counterclaim, are founded on alleged facts plainly'susceptible of satisfactory proof. The plaintiffs are not prejudiced by the lapse of time. On the other hand, if the facts alleged are true — and for the purpose of passing on the sufficiency of the counterclaim of the defendants they must be so taken — then the plaintiffs have been benefited by the lapse of time, and it would be manifestly inequitable and unjust to permit them to share in the partnership property involved in this action without sharing in the burdens assumed by the defendants in clearing it from debts and liabilities to which it might have been subjected by creditors of the partnership. Quoting from plaintiffs ’ brief, citing Wilson v. Wilson et al., 41 Or. 459, 69 Pac. 923:
“If by the lacbes and delay of tbe complainant it has become doubtful whether adverse parties can command the evidence necessary to a fair presentation of the case on their part, or if it appears that they have been deprived of any such advantage they might have had if the claim had been seasonably insisted upon, or before it became antiquated, or if they be subjected to any hardship that might have been avoided by reasonably prompt proceedings, a court of equity will not interfere to give relief, but will remain passive. * * * If, however, upon the other hand, it clearly appears that lapse of time has not in fact changed the conditions and relative positions of the parties, and that they are not materially impaired, and there are peculiar circumstances entitled to consideration as excusing the delay, the court will not deny the appropriate relief, although a strict and unqualified application of the rule of limitations would seem to require it. Every case is governed chiefly by its own circumstances.”
To the same effect are Clay v. Freeman, 118 U. S. 97, 6 Sup. Ct. 964, 30 L. Ed. 104; Stevens v. Grand Central Min. Co., 133 Fed. 28, 67 C. C. A. 284; Ryason v. Dunten, 164 Ind. 85, 73 N. E. 74; Shearer v. Hutterische Brunder Gemeinde, 28 S. D. 509, 134 N. W. 63; London & San Francisc Bank v. Dexter
As we view this case, upon the face of the pleadings, plaintiffs have suffered no prejudice by lapse of time. The property involved has been held, concededly, as partnership
It follows that the orders of the district court above referred to should he vacated and set aside, and the judgment as rendered on the pleadings reversed and vacated, in so far as it denies the defendants an accounting of partnership affairs and the relief sought for by their counterclaim relating to partnership affairs. "With respect to the order of sale of the Golden Era mining claim, the judgment may stand. It is so ordered. Costs to be paid out of the partnership estate.