Cameron v. National Surety Co.

272 F. 874, 1921 U.S. App. LEXIS 1698
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedApril 11, 1921
DocketNo. 5729
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 272 F. 874 (Cameron v. National Surety Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cameron v. National Surety Co., 272 F. 874, 1921 U.S. App. LEXIS 1698 (8th Cir. 1921).

Opinion

GARLAND, Circuit Judge.

Appeal from an order adjudging the appellant a member of the firm of Cameron & Co. and the firm and the members thereof bankrupts. Appellees have filed a motion to dismiss the appeal for want of jurisdiction. As to this question it is claimed that the order appealed from did not adjudge appellant a bankrupt individually, and that the Bankruptcy Act (Comp. St. §§ 9585-9656) does not provide for an appeal from an order simply adjudicating appellant a member of the Gnu of Cameron & Co. in a bankruptcy proceeding. We regard this as quite technical. The petition upon which . the order was made contains the following prayer:

“Wherefore your petitioners pray that service of this petition with a subpoena may be made upon the said Mary T. Cameron, William A. Cameron, and Henry T. Cameron, individually and as copartners doing business under the firm name and stylo of Cameron & Co., as provided in the acts of Congress relating to bankruptcy, and that they as individuals and the firm of Cameron & Co. may be adjudged bankrupt within the purview of said acts.”

The order itself reads as follows:

“Ordered, further, that the copartnership, Cameron & Co., being composed of Blary T. Cameron, William A. Cameron, and Henry T. Cameron, be adjudicated bankrupt in accordance with the prayer of said petitioning creditors.”

[1] The order, when rightly construed, did adjudge appellant a bankrupt, and an appeal is allowed from such an order by the express terms of the statute. There was an order of adjudication made on the same petition May 17, 1920, hut this order was set aside on June 1, 1920. The petition to vacate the order of May 17, 1920, was filed June 1, 1920. It is therefore claimed that, the petition to vacate no( having been filed within the time allowed for an appeal from the firsf order, and the order appealed from being the same as the first order, the time for taking an appeal had expired when the present appeal was taken. We think that this contention is unsound, in view of the record before us. The order of June 1, 1920, provided that the order of May 17, 1920, “be and the same is hereby in all things set aside.” The order of August 19, 1920, from which the appeal was taken, does not affirm the order of May 17, 1920, nor refer to it, but is an independent order made upon the pleadings and proofs; so we are of the opinion that on the record as it stands, the order appealed from was the only [876]*876order in existence and that the time for talcing an appeal ran from its date. The appeal was allowed August 20, 1920.. The order vacating the first order was not appealed from and is conclusive on this appeal. We therefore have jurisdiction. Todd v. Alden, 245 Fed. 462, 157 C. C. A. 624.

[2] On tire merits the question to be considered is, as to whether appellant was a member of the firm of Cameron & Co. If she was, the adjudication of bankruptcy must stand. Prior to March 1, 1917, Aaron P. Cameron and his two sons, Henry T. and William A. Cameron, .were copartners as contractors and builders at St. Paul, Minn. Aaron died on the date last mentioned. Mary T. Cameron, his wife, was at this time about 77 years of age. After the father’s death, the sons continued to carry on the business of contracting and building the same as before. No settlement of the partnership affairs was had. The surviving partners retained possession of all the partnership property and continued to use it in the business of theopartnership. Mary T. Cameron and William A. and Plenry T. Cameron testified that Mary T. Cameron had no interest in the partnership business, knew nothing about the same, and received no profits as such from the business of the firm. It appears that Aaron P. Cameron left his widow some life insurance. Outside of this, William A. Cameron, with whom Mary T. Cameron lived, furnished her board and occasionally a little money for church purposes; but, although it appears that whatever was furnished to Mary T. Cameron came from the business of Cam-' eron & Co., it does not appear that it came to the widow pursuant to any interest she had in the business of Cameron & Co., but rather from the son in the performance of his duty to his mother.

In May and September following the date upon which Aaron T. Cameron died, the firm of Cameron & Co. entered into two contracts with the state of Minnesota, for the erection and completion of Assembly Hall, State Asylum for the Insane at Anoka, Minn., and the new west wing of the main building of the State Asylum for the Insane at Hastings, Münn. Cameron & Co. also executed two bonds for the purpose of securing the performance of these contracts. In these contracts and bonds it was stated that the firm of Cameron & Co. consisted of Mary T., William A., and H. T. Cameron. Mary T. Cameron signed the contracts and bonds. When asked about the execution of these contracts and bonds, she testified that her son, Henry, asked her to sign them and when she asked him what he wanted her to sign them dor, he said that Mr. Thompson, who was in the employ of the agents of the National Surety Company at St. Paul, said “it was just a matter of form, because your husband is dead, for you to sign it.” The contracts and bonds were prepared in the office of the State Board of Control. Mr. Downer Mfullen, a witness called on behalf of the creditors of Cameron & Co., when asked if he recollected any of the circumstances which led to the execution of the contracts and bonds by Mary T. Cameron, testified as follows:

“My recollection is that at the time these contracts were awarded the question came up as to what had become of the interest of A. P. Cameron. I think it was the old gentleman who had died shortly before that and it [877]*877was stated to me by either W. A. or H. T. Cameron that his father’s interest had reverted to his mother, and for that reason the name of Mary T. Cameron was inserted in the contracts.”

Henry T. Cameron testified that he had never told Mullen that the interest of his father in the firm had reverted to his mother. Considering the age of Mary T. Cameron, and the undisputed evidence that she knew nothing about the business of Cameron & Co., had no part in it, and never received any profits or paid any losses as such, and in the absence of any evidence showing a contract between her and Henry T. and W. A. Cameron, either express or implied, of copartnership in the business of contracting and building, we think the execution by her of the bonds and contracts in the circumstances as they appear in the record, standing alone, is an insufficient support on which to base a finding that she was a member of the firm of Cameron & Co. It is quite elementary that—

“As against tlie heirs, devisees, and creditors of a deceased partner, the legal title to firm assets vests in the surviving partners, who are given tho exclusive right to the possession and control of the partnership assets, for the purpose of paying the partnership debts and disposing of the effects oí the concern for the benefit of themselves and the estate of the deceased. This ownership continues until the partnership affairs are settled, and a surviving partner in possession of partnership property has a right to hold it until the debts of the firm are paid, including any existing indebtedness due to himself.” 20 Tt. O. D. § 232, p. 995.

The death of Aaron P.

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Bluebook (online)
272 F. 874, 1921 U.S. App. LEXIS 1698, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cameron-v-national-surety-co-ca8-1921.