Caveney v. Caveney

291 N.W. 818, 234 Wis. 637, 1940 Wisc. LEXIS 145
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedApril 12, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 291 N.W. 818 (Caveney v. Caveney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Caveney v. Caveney, 291 N.W. 818, 234 Wis. 637, 1940 Wisc. LEXIS 145 (Wis. 1940).

Opinion

Fowler, J.

As appears from the foregoing statement of facts the case is for an accounting to the plaintiff as the surviving partner of James Caveney, deceased, by the administrator of the estate of James.

The books of the partnership, as kept under the direction of James, show the interest of James in the partnership to be an equity in the partnership at the date of his death of $8,953.49, plus a $16,000 note of the partnership to him, as against an equity of $6,756.08 in the surviving partner. The account as stated by the court gives the investment of James, on September 30, 1938, the date of the death of James, as $3,021.89 less than he had received from the business; the investment of the plaintiff, as $34,731.36, thus making the investment of the plaintiff $37,753.25 in excess of the investment of James. In the accounting interest at six per cent was allowed on the amounts of each partner’s investment. The interest thus allowed to the plaintiff is $8,777.90 in excess of that allowed to James. The amount of this interest was due to the plaintiff from the partnership in addition to the amount above stated as coming to her from her investment, thus making $43,509.26 as the amount coming to plaintiff from the partnership property before anything can go to the estate of James.

It is not claimed that the books of the partnership do not correctly disclose the transactions involved. Nor does it appear that the account as stated by the court is not correct if the theory on which it is made is correct. The differences in the accounts result from the legal consequences of the transactions disclosed by the partnership books and the other evidence adduced.

*644 The parties agree that the differences between the accounts are covered by three items: (1) The salary received by James in addition to the $1,400 a year allowed him by the partnership agreement; (2) sand and gravel sold by James to the partnership from pits purchased by him in his own name, the net avails of which the judgment of the court declares belong to the partnership; and (3) interest on the notes of the partnership paid to James. These several items involve, (1) overdrafts of salary by James aggregating $23,835.28; (2) payments to James for sand and gravel resulting in a net credit to the partnership of $18,454.35.; (3) and interest paid to James aggregating $13,661. These items will be separately discussed.

(1) The appellant claims that the several statements submitted to the plaintiff showing the aggregate of the office pay roll apprised her that James was taking more than $1,400 per year as salary, and that as she made no objection to his taking the excess she must be held to have assented thereto. The plaintiff denies that she knew that James was taking more than $1,400. It appears that as far back as 1925 the annual statements disclosed an office pay roll of nearly $4,700, and that later ones showed one as.high as $6,800. The office force consisted of only the bookkeeper and James, and at times one other person at most, but the plaintiff claims that she supposed it contained the employees at the coalyard office also-. The books of the -partnership showed just what James was drawing from the business, but the plaintiff never saw the books. Two facts in evidence show an intent and an attempt by James to conceal from the plaintiff the amount of salary he was taking. In the annual account for 1932 James directed the bookkeeper to put $1,000 of the office payroll account into the labor account for the express purpose of avoiding the plaintiff’s “suspecting” him of taking an excessive amount as salary. He was in fact taking $3,600 as salary at the time. Also about 1933 or 1934 when the plaintiff asked James at the partnership office to explain why her *645 interest in the business as shown by his annual account was so much less than his he merely said — “Well, that is just one of those things,” and walked out of the office. On another occasion when the plaintiff at the office asked for information James made no answer and again walked out on the plaintiff. The annual accounts submitted by James showed only the totals of the office pay-roll account. They did not show the amount of the withdrawals by James. The court found in effect that incorporating the withdrawals of James in the aggregate of the office pay-roll account in the annual statements instead of showing them separately in a salary account was for the fraudulent purpose of deceiving the plaintiff as to the amount of his salary withdrawals, and a breach of the partnership agreement requiring him to submit “true and correct” statements of the receipts, expenditures, profits, losses, and condition of the firm. Under all the evidentiary facts involved we consider that the trial judge was justified in so finding and in finding that the plaintiff did not know of' the salary withdrawals of James in excess of the amount expressly provided in the partnership agreement. In support of the ruling that James was not entitled to salary beyond that stipulated in the partnership agreement it is sufficient to cite Estate of Week, 204 Wis. 178, 235 N. W. 448, and sec. 123.15, Stats. The latter provides in part:

“Rights and duties of partners. The rights and duties of the partners in relation to the partnership shall be determined, subject to any agreement between them, by the following rules: . . .
“(6) No partner is entitled to- remuneration for acting in the partnership business, except that a surviving partner is entitled to reasonable compensation for his services in winding up the partnership affairs.”

(2) The partnership from its inception was producing from its own pits the sand and gravel sold in its business. In 1915 James bought for about $500 eight lots adjoining a partnership pit and took the title in his own name. In 1921 and 1922 he purchased for $2,000 eighteen lots of gravel *646 bank, taking the title in the name of himself and his wife, using $1,825 of partnérship funds toward the purchase. Pie returned $1,500 of the firm funds a few days after using them and charged his account therewith. In 1924 he purchased two other lots containing sand and gravel for about $500. The court found these purchases were made when the firm had ample funds with which to pay for them and that the purpose in not buying the properties for the firm was not to avoid speculative investments. The stripping of the purchases, except one, was done with partnership teams and workmen at partnership expense. Sand and gravel from these pits was used and sold in the partnership business, as well as that from the pits held in the partnership name, and James was paid the wholesale market price therefor, to an aggregate of $23,145.44. The plaintiff was found by the court hot to have known of these purchases by James or of his gravel sales to the partnership. One of the pits was later sold by James. The court -held that the sand and gravel transactions of James with the partnership and his taking of the title to the properties in his own name were in violation of his partnership obligations; that he held the property in trust for the partnership; that the net avails of the pits belonged to the partnership; and that the net avails received by James must be restored to the partnership.

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Bluebook (online)
291 N.W. 818, 234 Wis. 637, 1940 Wisc. LEXIS 145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/caveney-v-caveney-wis-1940.