138 P. 834 | Idaho | 1914
This action was instituted in the district court, praying the appointment of a receiver and the settling of partnership accounts and dissolution of the partnership business which had theretofore existed between plaintiff and defendant. A receiver was appointed.
The defendant, who is appellant in this court, failed to appear or answer, and a referee was thereafter appointed to report the facts together with findings and conclusions of law. After hearing the proofs the referee reported to the court and with some slight corrections the court approved the findings and conclusions and entered a decree and judgment. The defendant thereupon appealed from the judgment. This case brings up the judgment-roll alone and does not include the evidence taken in the case.
The principal and essential question presented on which it is claimed a reversal of the judgment should be awarded is the conclusion and judgment of the court in charging up the appellant with wages for the time he failed to devote to the partnership business during the existence of the partnership.
It is contended by appellant that in the absence of a contract to the contrary each party to a partnership agreement is expected to give his time and labor toward the business of the partnership; and that neither one can recover from the other, nor from the partnership, either on account of per
“There is no implied contract to compensate a partner who does a larger share of the work of the concern than his copartners. In the absence of a contrary contract or understanding,. each is expected to do his best without other reward than the general benefit. It can seldom be supposed that each one will be as valuable or as skilful or as useful or as industrious as the other. The diligent partner’s remedy for a failure of duty by the other is to ask a dissolution, but the law cannot measure the unequal services nor settle the comparative value of each, in order to reward the more diligent.”
This text is supported by many authorities: Galigher v. Lockhart, 11 Mont. 109, 27 Pac. 446; Bindley on Partnership, 8th ed., p. 454; Insley v. Shire, 54 Kan. 793, 45 Am. St. 308, 39 Pac. 713; Folsom v. Marlette, 23 Nev. 459, 49 Pac. 39.
In Jones v. Marshall, 24 Ida. 678, 135 Pac. 841, this court held, in line with the general rule, that a surviving partner is not entitled to compensation for his services in winding up the partnership business, except in peculiar and special cases. The same doctrine was suggested in McElroy v. Whitney, 12 Ida. 512, 88 Pac. 349. At section 770 of Bates on Partnership it is stated that “where one partner left the business and gave it almost no attention, and the other worked hard at it for over twenty years, he cannot claim compensation, though he is the managing partner who has sole superintendence of the business. ’ ’ (Fierce v. Scott, 37 Ark. 308; Randle v. Richardson, 53 Miss. 176.)
Turning to the pleadings in the case to see if they are within the rule of law contended for by appellant, we find from the complaint that it is alleged that the plaintiff and defendant entered into a contract and agreement “to purchase a band of sheep and the necessary teams, wagons and equipment to run and handle the same, each party to advance one
The court thereupon concluded that the partnership should be charged with the entire value of services performed by both plaintiff and defendant, and that expended for a herder • and that each member of the partnership should be charged with one half of that sum.
In the light of the authorities and the condition of the pleadings, as hereinbefore recited, we think the court was justified in reaching the conclusion that the defendant was chargeable with his full time during the existence of the partnership.
The judgment must be affirmed, and it is so ordered. Costs awarded in favor of respondent.