44 W. Va. 342 | W. Va. | 1898
On the 11th of August, 1870, A. G. Smith, B. H. Brown, and J. W. Brown entered into a written contract, forming a co-partnership, under the name of Smith, Brown & Co.,
Plaintiff alleges in his bill: That ever since February, 1871, the firm of Smith, Brown & Co. has been transacting a retail merchandise business, and has also engaged in some side transactions in wool and real estate. That the parties contributed twelve thousand three hundred dollars to start the business, each paying in an equal amount, and invested a part of their capital in the purchase of an undivided half of a house and lot on Main street, in said town of Clarksburg*, from one R. N. Pool. That the firm entered into a contract with Pool that he (Pool) should have the use of one-half of the second floor of said building, and the rents of the third floor or story, and the firm was to have the first floor of said building, consisting of two rooms and one-half of the second floor, free of rent for one year from the time said rooms should be finished and occupied by the firm (the rooms then being unfinished), and after the first year the firm was to have the two rooms on the first floor, and one-half the second floor, which also contained two rooms, at an annual rent, which was proportional to the rental of the whole building, which latter was to be upon the basis of six per cent, on the entire cost of the building and lot, which was about fifteen thousand dollars. That the upper or third story consisted of a hall or large room, which was used as a public hall for lectures,
Beeson H. Brown filed his demurrer and answer, avering' that it was understood and agreed among the members of soid firm that the firm would purchase the second moiety of the property for the firm whenever it could be secured at “a low-ebb price,” and that plaintiff acted in bad faith, and purchased said moiety for a nominal sum of $-, and, in violation of said agreement and understanding, had the same fraudulently conveyed to others, instead of to the firm which was entitled to it; that he knew nothing of the separate estate of plaintiff’s wife, Anna M. Smith, nor of the purchase of said moiety for or by her, and did not admit such purchase or any agreement with her
The defendant John W. Brown also filed his demurrer and answer; admitted the partnership and the purchase of the moiety of the property by the firm, but denied the
On the 4th day of November, 1894, notice was served on the defendants by plaintiff: that on the 10th day of December, 1894, he would move the judge of the circuit court to refer said cause to a commissioner, for the purpose of .ascertaining- and reporting the matters prayed to be referred in the bill filed in this cause, and also for the appointment of a receiver to take charge, sell, and dispose of the stock of goods and merchandise belonging to the firm of Smith Brown & Co., in the building situated on Main street, in the town of Clarksburg, on which 10th day of December, 1894, on hearing the motion, the judge referí ed the cause, by consent of parties, to K. M. Turner, as special commissioner, to state and settle the accounts between the plaintiff and defendants as partners, trading under the firm name of Smith, Brown & Co., as to all transaction or business, of whatever nature, in which they have been engaged as such firm, to state and settle the debts and liabilities of said firm so far as they can be ascertained, as well as the amount of assets belonging to said firm, and what disposition should be made of the same, together with any other matters such commissioner may deem pertinent, etc. and, by consent, the motion to appoint a receiver was continued until the next regular term of the court. September 23, 1895, the defendants filed exceptions to the report of Special Commissioner Turner, which had been filed September 11, 1895; and the court, having heard and considered the motion to appoint a receiver in the cause, the arguments of counsel thereon, the bill and answers and the depositions filed with the report, appointed Mathew G. Holmes special receiver in the cause, and on the 29th day of January, 1896, the plaintiff filed an exception to the report of Special Commissioner Turner, on the ground that the commissioner erred in allowing plaintiff rent upon the new building from October 26, 1889, instead of from the 7th day of June, 1888, which exception the Court sustained. The exception of defendant John Wr Brown to so much of the report as ascertains and finds that John W. Brown is not entitled to one-third, interest in
From this decree, the defendants appeal to this Court,
The most of the assignments can be considered with and as part of the first assignment of error, which is sufficiently general to cover all except the second, which relates to the ‘‘Sardis Coal Deal,” the questions arising out of which the commissioner submitted to the court without recommendation. Defendant John W. Brown excepts to the report, because it is without date, and hence it cannot
On the 6th of August, 1870, the firm of Smith, Brown & Co. purchased from R. N. Pool the one undivided half of a lot with the building thereon, which was in course of erection. The agreement for the purchase provided that the said Pool, in consideration of having the use of one-half of the second story or second floor and the proceeds of the rents of the third floor of the building, was to allow the firm to have the first floor or two business rooms, and also one-half of the second floor, free of any rent, for one year from the date said rooms should be furnished and occupied by the firm, and that, after the first year, they were to have the use of the same rooms at annual rent, bearing its proportion to the whole of the building, based on six per cent, of the whole cost of the building and lot, and that the firm should continue to occupy the rooms at the same rent or terms as long as the firm should remain one-half owner in said building. The cost of the building, including the lot, was thirteen thousand, five hundred and sixteen dollars and ninety-six cents, one-half of which was six thousand, seven hundred and fifty-eight dollars and forty-eight cents, and upon which last-named sum the rent was fixed at six per cent, and to so continue as long as the firm continued to own one-half the property; and defend
Appellee, for the new building erected on one-half of the lot after the fire and the partition, charges and is allowed by the commissioner six per cent, interest as rental on
The exception to commissioner’s report that the statute of limitations should operate and apply in favor of the heirs of Anna M. Smith as to the firm’s share of the hall rent received by them, or by appellee for them, although such statute was not pleaded by appellee, because appellants had pleaded and were entitled thereby to the benefit of the statute of limitations against rents, is well taken. Before a party can have the benefit of the bar created by the statute of limitations, he must plead the statute, or in some manner indicate his intention to claim the benefit of it. Riddle v. McGinnis, 22 W. Va., 253, 275; Seborn v. Beckwith, 30 W. Va., 774, (5 S. E. 450). “It is generally held that the statute of limitations must be pleaded if it is relied on, and that, if not pleaded, it will be considered by the court to be waived.” 13 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law, 769.
The seventh assignment is “that the coui't erred in not finding and decreeing that the rents for the Pool building, or a part of them accruing- after the death of Anna M. Smith, were barred by the statute of limitations, and thereby thus far overruling- said report.” The appellee, .after the death of said Anna, his wife, was tenant by the cur-tesy, and the rents were due to him on said property. “In order to subject an action of one partner against his co-partner to the bar of the statute of limitations, it must not only appear that there has been a dissolution of the partnership more than five years before the institution of the
The eighth assignment, that the court erred in sustaining the exception of the plaintiff, Smith, to the commissioner’s report in relation to the rent of the “new building” from June 7, 1888, instead of from .October 26, 1889, is irot well taken. Appellee was tenant by the curtesy of the lot. He erected a building upon it, and the firm occupied the property from the 7th day of June, 1888, and a reasonable rent therefor was due to him from the firm. While it is true that it appears from the record that he erected the building with funds the property of his children, he is not dealing with the firm as guardian of his children, but as a partner in the firm; and the firm is liable to him only as an individual and partner, and not in his fiduciary capacity. If appellee was guardian of his children, no evidence of the fact appears in the record! He was improperly held as guardian by the commissioner in his report. In any event, he would be held to account on his bond as guardian, if he was such, for the funds which came to his hands in that.capacity.
Defendants’ exception to commissioner’s report “because he allows compound interest on rent account” is not well taken, because the commissioner does not compound the interest. In ascertaining the rent for any given year, he simply computed the interest on the value fixed on the property as the basis of rent at six per cent, for the year. When so ascertained, it showed the amount of the year’s rent. Then he allowed interest on that sum, not of interest but of rent, from the end of the rental year up to the date of making- up his report, and so on each year’s rental.
The evidence touching the eleventh assignment of error, that the court should not have sustained the commissioner’s report in disregarding the agreement between the partners that twenty five per cent, profit should be added to the cost price of all merchandise taken by them out of the store, and charged in their respective accounts, is so conflicting- and uncertain as to warrant the commissioner in so reporting, and the court in sustaining- such report. Smith v. Yoke, 27 W. Va., 639.
The thirteenth assignment is that the court erred in not allowing defendant B. H. Brown the salary claimed by him in his answer, of fifty-dollars per month for extra services. The evidence shows the defendant B. H. Brown gave more time, effort, and energy to the business of the firm, and was worth more to it, than both the other partners; and it is clearly shown that but for his pluck and energy after the fire, in August, 1887, the firm would have been and remained what its condition seemed to be when the smoke cleared away from the ruins of their plant, — hopelessly insolvent. Yet, in the absence of an agreement or contract providing for compensation for such services, it cannot be allowed. In Forrer v. Forrer, 39 Grat. 134, Syl., point 1: “The law is well settled that one partner is not entitled to claim compensation for his services in the business without a special contract for such compensation, and although one partner attended almost exclusively to a very large partnership business from 1844 to 1865, there having been no agreement for compensation to him, he is not, under the circumstances, entitled to compensation.” Also, in Hyre v. Lambert, 37 W. Va., 26, (16 S. E. 446), Syl., point 5: “Under ordinary circumstances, and in the absence of an agreement to that effect, one partner cannot charge his co-partners with any sum for compensation, whether in the shape of salary, commission, or otherwise, on account of his own trouble in conducting the partnership business; and in this respect a managing or acting partner is in no different position from any other partner.” In the case at bar, while it is strenuously contended that the claim for compensation to B. H. Brown for extra services should be allowed, there is no pretense that there was any agreement or understanding between the parties that he should have such compensation.
As to the assignment that the court erred in appointing a receiver, courts of equity are invested with discretionary powers, under our statute, “in any proper case pending-
Let us now consider the action of the court in holding, by its decree, that the transaction known as the “Sardis Coal Deal” was a partnership transaction, and which is the appellants’ second assignment of error. On the 11th of August, 1870, appellee and appellants entered into a wifitten contract bearing that date, (which was only signed, however, by A. G. Smith and J. W. Brown), whereby they agreed to enter into a co-partnership in the business of “general merchandising,” from the 11th day of August, 1870, for the term of five years next thence ensuing, under the firm name of Smith, Brown & Co,; the business to be
It appears from the evidence in the cause that the partners individually carried on business for themselves, respectively, during much of the time of the existence of the partnership, especially after the fire in August, 1887. Soon after that occurrence, J. W. Brown left for the West, and did not return until the next year. Appellee, Smith, built the new house, commencing about October, 1887, and finishing' it so that the firm entered it June 8, 1888. J. W. Brown testifies that B. H. Brown was to take charge of the stock of goods, and do the best he could with them towards paying the firm’s indebtedness, and, as for himself, lie began at once to make a living- outside of the firm’s business, realizing' that, if the debts of the firm were to be paid, the firm’s assets would all have to go in that direction, so far as the goods were concerned; that, for about a year after they went into the new building, all three of the partners gave the business of the firm considerable attention; that after that, so far as he could learn from Smith’s talk, he was looking after the building- of some houses at his home in Preston county, some other houses at Fairmont, and othér outside business, and B. H. Brown, except the year referred to, had entire charge of the business. It appears from the evidence that both B. BE. Brown and appellee. Smith, were pretty actively engaged in taking options on coal lands in their individual names, respectively; that two “coal deals,” known as the “Hogsett” and “Katylick” coal fields, were entered into by the firm and Col. Wilson, who had an interest in the same; that said deals were consummated, and sales made, and the firm’s part of the profits applied to the payment of the firm’s debts; that B. H. Brown, on his own account, took options on several tracts of coal land which constituted what is known as the “Sardis Coal Deal.” The options constituting that deal were from forty to fifty tracts; all options taken in the name of B. H. Brown. Appellee charges in his bill that this coal deal was to be consummated for the benefit of the firm; that a sufficient part of the profits, which were about fourteen thous- and dollars, was to be kept or retained by B. H. Brown, to equalize his account in the store with the other partners;
As against the positive evidence of B. H. Brown and J. W. Brown, two of the partners, strongly supported by the evidence of J. M. Plant and C. A. Boggess that the Sardis coal deal was a private transaction of B. EL Brown, and that neither of the other partners had any interest in it, ap-pellee gives his own testimony contradicting it, and the testimony of several witnesses to certain conversations had with B. H. Brown tending to show that he admitted the interest of the other partners in the transaction, and also introduced three letters written by said B. H. Brown to said Smith, when Smith was at Uniontown, for the purpose of negotiating the sale of the Katylick and Hogsett fields. It is argued by appellee that these letters strongly tend to prove appellee’s position in the matter, that the Sardis deal was not only a partnership enterprise, but that B. H. Brown himself so regarded it at that time. I have
Reversed.