Barnett v. West Const. Co.

69 F.2d 266, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 3513
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMarch 8, 1934
DocketNo. 7201
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 69 F.2d 266 (Barnett v. West Const. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barnett v. West Const. Co., 69 F.2d 266, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 3513 (5th Cir. 1934).

Opinion

HUTCHESON, Circuit Judge.

Alleging that sums paid to defendant for income tax purposes, under clause 22 1 of a working agreement they had, had been diverted from that purpose and converted by defendant to its own use, plaintiffs brought this suit for an accounting.

The defense was no diversion. Specifically, it was asserted that the moneys had been received and applied by defendant as agreed, both when the profit sharing contract was made and when, in 1926, all accounts were settled and the net profits distributed. During 1925 and 1926 plaintiffs, as partners, had a unique working agreement in regard to road contracts in Florida, with defendant, a general contractor, doing business in many other places as well. The writing which effected and controlled this arrangement designated it as a “Cooperation.” The agreement was not made public. It was not [267]*267known to outsiders. It did not exist as to them. All contracts were taken in defendant’s name, all obligations were incurred, all business done in its name. As to the parties to it, it was only a symbol for accounting purposes. By its use, in addition to salaries of $60- per week paid to each of the partners, they were to receive two-thirds of the net profits defendant made out of the contracts it covered. Plaintiffs thus pleaded the effect of the agreement: “Under and by said contract defendant corporation was given the contracting control, the credit control, and the financing control of the business.” In fact, however, the agreement gave nothing to the defendant. It was treated by the parties to it as, it was, a profit sharing accounting device by which the plaintiffs, employees of the defendant, got from it two-thirds of tho net profits the company made out of that part of its business. A year to year arrangement, it provided in section 23 2 for discontinuance after thirty days’ notice, and the distribution of the net profits, one-third to defendant and two-thirds to plaintiffs. On December 6,1926, it was discontinued and its net profits were distributed in accordance with the contract. In the course and as a part of the accounting provided for in the contract, and the distribution of profits had at its dissolution, 33% per cent, of the net income, $119,398.07 for 1925 and $208,682.-23 for 3926 was paid lo defendant for income taxes under clause 22. It was as to these payments, $16,338.75 for 1925, and $28,172.-10 for 1926, a total of $44,290.85,. that plaintiffs’ suit sought an accounting. As to these plaintiffs alleged that they should have been applied, but were not, in exoneration of plaintiffs’ tax liability on account of the profits distributed to them. They sought a decree awarding two-thirds of them to plaintiffs.

The District Judge thought absurd the claim plaintiffs put forward, that the moneys paid defendant under section 22 had been paid to them for the purpose of paying the income ta,x of the eo-operation in exoneration of the partnership of Barnett & Bm-brey, and of its individual members in respect of these earnings. He rejected it altogether. He thought equally absurd defendant’s claim that tho moneys had been paid to it to pay its own income tax. He found it unnecessary, however, to construe the clause to determine what the parties had originally intended by it, because he found that plaintiffs and defendant had completely settled all matters at issue between them. He found that the accounting and distribution the parties had when in December, 1926, they distributed the net profits operated as a settlement, and resulted in a complete accord and satisfaction.

Plaintiffs vigorously assail the decree as wrong, in tho results accomplished and the reasons given. Defendant as vigorously maintains that the decree was right. Plaintiffs urge that their suit is not correctly apprehended if considered as defeated by settlement. They insist that their suit is not in contradiction of, but in accordance with, the agreement to discontinue. They say that they are merely asking that the moneys which were paid tho defendant- for a pnrpose, be applied to that purpose. They insist that this in no manner contradicts the agreement for discontinuance, it fully affirms it. They say, in short, that their suit though in, form an action for an equitable accounting, is in effect a suit for moneys had and received from plaintiffs for a specific purpose, which, diverted from that purpose by defendant, should be returned to them.

Speaking broadly, we think plaintiffs are right as to the nature of their suit and their rights under it, if they can maintain tho proposition they advance. Wo think they should have the moneys they sue tor if in law the defendant has diverted them from the purpose for which they were lodged with it. It becomes .necessary, then, to inquire whether defendant is in fact withholding money from fhe purposes to which, by the agreement under which it got it, it was to be devoted. To determine this requires a construction of the contract, not alone as it was written, but as the parties have interpreted it.

Defendant insisting that the moneys were paid to it to pay its income tax, points out that all of the business was done by it and in its name; all of the profits were earned by it and in its name. All of the property employed in the conduct of the business was owned by it and assessed in its name. All taxes due in connection with the operations were the taxes of the company. It insists [268]*268that just as the company put aside or set up on its books in respect of ■ the business, it did elsewhere, in the profits from which Barnett and Embrey • had no share, 13% per cent, of its income to pay the income tax due on account of it, so here the business in which the co-operation was interested had to contribute to company funds to pay its income tax 13% per cent, of the net income of the business done before there were any net profits to be distributed under the co-operation agreement.

Plaintiffs say this is not, it cannot be, a fair construction of the contract. That such construction would result in reducing the profits it was agreed Barnett and Embrey should have by the amount of their contribution to defendant’s income tax. They say that what was intended by the contract, what it means, is that all taxes accruing as the result of the business- done under the working agreement, whether against the defendant, the co-operation, or Barnett and Embrey, were to be paid out of the profits realized from that business. It is quite clear that the clause under consideration does not in terms say any such thing; it is equally clear, we think, that no reasonable construction of its terms will yield such meaning. At no place in the agreement is any mention made of the payment of Barnett and Embrey’s taxes; there is no statement in it that the co-operation would pay taxes to the government. On the contrary, the agreement in terms declares that the co-operation will pay the company, and that the company Will pay the government in connection with its income taxes. If then the contract stood for construction without aid from the actions of the parties, we think it would admit of no other meaning than that, by clause 22, the parties intended to make the amounts paid by the co-operation to the company on account of income taxes, a charge against the income before net profits could be distributed to the sharers. We think that by clause 23 they intended to distribute only the net profits thus determined. The other paragraphs of the contract, and the acts of the parties, bear this out.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Ace Electric Supply Co. v. Terra Nova Electric, Inc.
288 So. 2d 544 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1973)
Wilcox v. Atkins
213 So. 2d 879 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1968)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
69 F.2d 266, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 3513, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barnett-v-west-const-co-ca5-1934.