84 Wash. 558 | Wash. | 1915
Nick Welch died intestate in the city of North Yakima on July 26, 1913. He left surviving him a widow, but no issue, and his nest of kin were two brothers, Martin Welch and John Welch. At the time of his death, the decedent and his brother Martin Welch were conducting a saloon in North Yakima in the name of the decedent, which with the appurtenances and fixtures and stock on hand had a value of some $3,055.70. There was also on deposit, as the proceeds of the business, in a local bank at North Yakima the sum of $706.67, and on deposit in a bank at Tacoma of
Up to this time, Mrs. Welch had not been represented by counsel, further than the attorneys of Martin Welch can be said to have represented her. She thereupon procured counsel of her own selection and petitioned the court for the removal of Martin Welch as special administrator, praying that letters of administration be granted to her; averring in the petition that the property of which her husband died possessed was the community property of herself and her husband; that Martin Welch had no interest therein as a partner of her husband or otherwise; that she had been induced to sign the petition for the appointment of Martin Welch as such administrator reciting otherwise under a mistake as to its contents, and because of fraud and deceit practiced upon her by Martin Welch and his attorneys. Issue was taken on the allegations of the petition of Martin Welch, who also presented a counter petition averring that he was a partner in the business conducted in the name o.f Nick Welch, and praying that he be appointed administrator of the partnership. A trial was had upon the allegations of the petition and counter pe
It is not questioned in this court that the trial court had jurisdiction to determine the issues presented by the petitions in this form of procedure, and the sole question argued by counsel is whether the evidence justified the conclusion of the trial court that the business conducted in the name of Nick Welch was in fact the partnership business of the decedent and Martin Welch. Much evidence has been introduced by each of the parties tending to support their respective contentions, and we are constrained to say, after its careful perusal, that it leaves no abiding conviction in our minds in favor of either contention. On the one side, aré the outward circumstances; the fact that the purchase of the business was negotiated alone by the decedent; that he paid from his own funds one-half of the very considerable purchase price of $14,000; that he gave his own obligations to secure the remainder; that the business was conducted in his individual name, and that no division of the profits was ever made. On the other side, we have the repeated declarations of the decedent, commencing at a time when the negotiations for the purchase of the business were pending and extending down to a short period before his death, to the effect that his brother had an interest in the business and was a partner therein. Added to this, is the active participation of the brother in the business; that he drew no fixed wage; that he took care of one of the two shifts in which the parties divided the business day; that he kept the books of the concern; kept charge of the daily cash receipts; made the local deposits of
But it would unduly prolong this opinion without purpose to detail the evidence. It received the painstaking consideration of the trial judge, as is evidenced by the able and carefully considered opinion he filed in connection with his findings. We are unable to conclude that the evidence preponderates against his findings, and under the rule, are constrained to affirm his decree. It is so ordered.
Mount, Crow, Ellis, and Main, JJ., concur.