124 N.Y.S. 152 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1910
■The defendant appeals from a judgment dissolving a limited partnership, which was formed on February 5,1906, by a written agreement between plaintiffs, who became general partners, and the defendant, who became a special partner, contributing $80,000 to the capital of the firm. Upon this contribution defendant was to. receive .interest at the rate of six per cent and one-sixth of the profits. The copartnership was to commence on the 10th day of February, 1906, and to terminate on December 1, 1911. The articles are drawn at great length and with much-detail, but are qualified and governed by the last paragraph in which it is expressly agreed that thé statutes relating to limited partnerships shall be taken and deemed a part of the agreement, and that everything inconsistent with or not in accordance with said statutes shall be null and void and the provisions of such statutes shall govern. In considering the rights and obligations of the general partners and the special partner as between themselves we shall, therefore, find it necessary to consider only the provisions of the Partnership Law relating to limited partnerships, referring to the copartnership agreement only by way of illustration of the provisions of the statute. The title of the firm was Joseph Skolny & Co. That firm had in its employ two persons, one named David 3VI. Sinclair, who had charge of the office and accounts, and the other Lewis E. Bemington, who was a salesman covering a large territory. The evidence shows that the relation between these employees and the general partners of Skolny & Co. had become somewhat strained, and in December, 1908, these two employees determined to form a copartnership for the purpose of carrying on a similar business to that of Skolny & Co., to wit, the manufacture of juvenile clothing. A proposition was made to defendant to become a special partner in the copartnership to be formed by Bemington and Sinclair, and that he contribute to the capital thereof the sum of $25,000. Before finally accepting defendant advised the general partners of Skolny & Co. of the proposition which had been made to him, and of his disposition to
This action on the part of defendant is severely criticized by plaintiffs, but, as we consider, without any reason. The defendant’s contribution to the capital of the Skolny firm was a mere matter of business investment, and the firm had prospered.and made large profits. Not unnaturally defendant -was .desirous of prolonging so profitable an investment; and failing that could not be censured ■ for looking for other opportunities to invest. The Skolnys declined to consent to an extension of ■ their copartnership ' arrangement stating that they were already prepared to pay back defendant’s contribution to the capital of the firm when the copartnership should expire by limitation. The learned justice at Special Term found as a matter of fact that the plaintiffs did not at any, time consent to or acquiesce in the defendant’s act in becoming a special partner in the firm of L. E. Remington & Co.,, composed of Remington and Sinclair. A contrary finding would' probably have been justified by the' proof, because the evidence indicates that plaintiffs’ opposition to defendant’s declared purpose to join the new firm was of the slightest. The case does not, however, in our opinion, turn on the question whether or not plaintiffs did in fact consent or object. For the purposes of this appeal we may assume that they did not consent. The real question resolves itself to this: Whether a special partner in a limited partnership commits ■ a breach of his copartnership obligation by becoming contemporaneously a special partner in another limited partnership conducting a similar or competing business. In a certain sense subsidiary to this question is a second, whether such a breach of obligation, if it be a breach, justifies a judgment dissolving the first partnership at the suit of the general partners. “ A dissolution is the most far-reaching and radical remedy between partners, and a court of equity will not force partners into a dissolution, if justice can be done without resorting to this extreme. step.” (Berolzheimer v. Strauss, 19 J. & S. 96; citing Collyer Part. 339, § 345; Lindley Part. 752, 753.) Speaking generally, a dissolution will hot be decreed except for gross misconduct, .lack of good faith or some cause which is productive of serious and permanent injury to the partnership concerned or renders it impracticable to carry on the
' The judgment appealed from must be reversed and a new' trial ordered, with costs to defendant to abide event.
Ingraham, P. J., and McLaughlin, J., concurred; Laughlin and Dowling, JJ., dissented.
Judgment reversed, new trial ordered, costs to appellant to abide event.
See 1 R. S. 765, § 13, as amd. by Laws of 1895, chap. 145; Gen. Laws, chap. 51 (Laws of 1897, chap. 430), § 41; Consol. Laws, chap. 39 (Laws of 1909, chap. 44), § 41:— [Rep.