Burleigh v. Foreman

130 F. 13, 64 C.C.A. 381, 1904 U.S. App. LEXIS 4126
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedFebruary 26, 1904
DocketNo. 472
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 130 F. 13 (Burleigh v. Foreman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burleigh v. Foreman, 130 F. 13, 64 C.C.A. 381, 1904 U.S. App. LEXIS 4126 (1st Cir. 1904).

Opinion

ALDRICH, District Judge.

This is an appeal in bankruptcy, and as such raises the whole case. The question here is whether a seat in the Boston Stock Exchange, a seat in the New York Stock Exchange, a seat in the Chicago Board of Trade, and certain Wheelman Company stock and notes, were the property of E. C. Hodges & Co., which company is in bankruptcy. There were other questions below, but we have only to deal with such questions as are raised by the assignment of errors-, and they all relate to the single question stated.

The discussions upon the briefs and oral arguments have taken a very broad range, but, after all, the question in the case is a very simple one, and is largely, if not altogether, a question of fact. Williams on Bankruptcy (7th Ed.) p. 158. The argument of the appellee is largely constructed upon certain supposed presumptions and inferences as to relative rights and as to community of interests which result where one partner only contributes property to the capital of the partnership; but such argument is without much force in this case, because the question here is whether the stock exchange seats in controversy were actually contributed to the partnership, and, in a situation like this, that becomes a question of fact. The issue here is .not as to the rights of creditors in respect to property, which we are at liberty to assume was contributed by a sole partner to the capital of the partnership. The question whether the property was ever in fact contributed is raised in limine, and therefore the question whether the individual title ever passed to the partnership is first to be determined.

The question of contribution once established, various presumptions as to ownership and rights result, and substantial questions of legal and equitable creditor rights may then be largely influenced by considerations of estoppel and other considerations having reference to the ostensible ownership; and oftentimes, when individual property is once in, it may be held by creditors, although the contributing or creditor partner, as between himself and the other or debtor partners, would be entitled to restoration of title, or to an accounting with re[15]*15spect to the property. Oftentimes confusion arises by applying to what is here the original question, that of contribution, inferences, and presumptions resulting from confused conditions under reputed and ostensible ownership in the course of the partnership business; but there is nothing in the situation here which entitles the partnership creditors to hold the property in question upon the ground of reputed or ostensible ownership as against the individual ownership, if such individual ownership has never been parted with in fact. This case, so far as we are to consider it, turns upon the question whether the first point is established; that is to say, Is the fact established that Hodges, who, it is conceded, was the individual owner of the property in question, actually contributed it to the partnership enterprise?

The solution of that essential and preliminary question is not aided by any presumption or inference as to community of interests based upon the fact of- contribution. In a situation like the one before us, the proposition that the title was transferred must be established like any other proposition of fact.

Upon this fundamental question of fact there is no distinct finding by either the referee in bankruptcy or the District Court. The conclusion of the referee, based upon findings and opinion, was that the property in question formed part of the assets of the joint estate. Just how far this conclusion was influenced by presumptions resulting from ostensible and reputed ownership we cannot know. Neither is there anything in the record which enables us to determine just how far the referee was influenced by statements of customers who dealt with the firm that they had been told that the property in question was joint assets, but there is, however, enough in the certificate of the referee to show that such phase was taken into consideration by him. Neither is it apparent from the record that the District Court made a distinct finding upon the essential and preliminary question of fact. On the contrary, it would seem from the opinion, which is before us, that the learned judge of that court, who did not have the witnesses before him, and who acted upon the record now before us, with expressions of doubt reached his conclusions upon general reasoning in respect to law and fact.

Indeed, the learned District Judge says that “the intentions of both parties, Hodges and Swift, were vague. The original partnership between Hodges and Lowry was of an uncertain character.” Again, “When the new partnership was formed, consisting of Hodges, Swift, and Lowry, the intention was but a little more definite.”

We are aware that, in the absence of circumstances showing the contrary, the presumption is that all facts necessary to a decree were found by the court below; but in this case the circumstances show that the precise question whether Hodges put the seats, in the various stock exchanges, into the firm, intending thereby to contribute their title and their value to the capital of the partnership, was not determined as a distinct question of fact. There being no express findings stated in such a way as to make it clear that they were distinct findings upon questions of fact, we are not aided in our consideration of this case by the weight which ordinarily attaches to findings of courts of first instance.

[16]*16The stock exchange seats were the individual property of Hodges at the time the partnership was formed. The precise question, as we have said, is whether he, parted with his ownership of the seats, and contributed their value to the partnership assets. There is nothing in the articles of copartnership or in the evidence as to the conduct of the parties by way of practical construction of the particular paragraph relating to the stock exchange seats, or in the circumstances of this case, viewing it in all its aspects, of sufficient potency to establish the proposition and justify a finding that Hodges parted with his title by contributing the seats in the various stock exchanges to the partnership capital. The partnership was for the limited period of six months. There is a paragraph in the agreement which provides that the New York and Boston seats standing in the name of Hodges shall draw interest up to the amount of $50,000, which shall be charged to-the general expense account. The Chicago seat was not referred to at all. The seats in the various stock exchanges were of a substantial value, considerably more than $50,000. It is contended that Swift, as an equivalent, contributed $50,000 to the partnership capital, but this turns out to be a loan negotiated by him upon the responsibility of the partnership. The seats were never credited to Hodges, nor were they entered upon the books as partnership assets. The fact that Hodges was to be paid interest on the arbitrary sum of $50,000 is more consistent with the idea that it was in the nature of compensation for the use than with the idea of an outright contribution of his individual property to the partnership capital. There is no occasion, and we have no right, to enter the field of supposed presumption and inference resulting from a community of interests, based upon the fact of contribution to the partnership property.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
130 F. 13, 64 C.C.A. 381, 1904 U.S. App. LEXIS 4126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burleigh-v-foreman-ca1-1904.