Chambers v. Johnston

201 S.W. 488, 180 Ky. 73, 1918 Ky. LEXIS 19
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMarch 22, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 201 S.W. 488 (Chambers v. Johnston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chambers v. Johnston, 201 S.W. 488, 180 Ky. 73, 1918 Ky. LEXIS 19 (Ky. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Hurt

Affirming.

On April 1st, 1911, the appellant, Henning Chambers; the appellee, J. Stoddard Johnston, Jr., Samuel [74]*74C. Henning, and Lynford M. Dickinson, became partners, under the name of Henning, Chambers & Co. The contract of partnership was reduced to writing and recites as the objects and purposes of the partnership, as follows:

“That for and in consideration of their respective agreements herein contained, it is agreed between the parties as follows, to-wit:

(1.) The said parties agree to become and hereby do become partners: (1) for the purpose óf carrying on the business of stock and bond brokers, and dealings incidentally connected therewith; and, (2) for the purpose of dealing in the cities of New York, Chicago, Louisville and elsewhere, through the various exchanges and otherwise, in stocks, bonds and other securities, cotton, grain, coffee, produce, provisions and other commodities.”

It will be observed, that by the terms of the partnership contract, the activities of the partnership and its scope and purpose were not confined to “carrying on the business of stock and bond brokers, and dealings incidentally connected” with the business of stock and bond brokers, but, by the second subsection of section 1, the further business of “dealing” in all other places “through the various exchanges and otherwise,” not only in stocks and bonds, but in “other securities.”

Section 2, of the contract, is as follows:

“The business of the partnership shall be conducted under the firm name and style of Henning, Chambers & Co., and shall have offices in the city of Louisville, state of Kentucky, and in the city of New York, state of New York, and in such other places as from time to time may be deemed advisable.”

Section 4, of the contract, provided as follows:

“Each of the partners, except Samuel C. Henning, shall at all times during the continuance of the partnership give all of his time, service, influence and experience, and do the utmost of his skill for the joint interest, profit and advantage of the business aforesaid.”

The reason for excepting Henning from the requirements of this provision of the contract is explained, in the evidence, to be the fact, that he was then in very feeble health.

By other terms of the contract it was provided, that the partners should, “as capital for the use of the partnership and to be used for its business,” put into the partnership funds the following amounts, respectively: [75]*75Samuel C. Henning, $32,500.00; Henning Chambers $32,500.00; Lynford M. Dickinson $2b,000.00; and J. Stoddard Johnston, Jr., $5,000.00. Henning, also, contributed to the use of the partnership a seat upon the New York stock exchange, estimated as of the value of '$75,000.00, and one upon the Chicago stock exchange, the value of which was not stated. Each of the partners was to be paid interest annually upon the sum contributed by him, as above provided, to the capital of the partnership. The net profits of the partnership, so far as it concerned, Henning, Chambers and Johnston, were to be received by them in the following proportions: Henning, 4-0%; Chambers, 40%; and Johnston, 15%. At the beginning, the contract contained other provisions, which regulated the receipt of the net profits of the New York office and the amount to be received by Dickinson, but Dickinson, in the summer of 1911, withdrew from the partnership and the sum contributed by him to the capital of the firm was withdrawn by him, and thereafter it was' mutually agreed by the remaining partners, that Johnston should receive 20% of the net profits of the business, instead of 15%, as theretofore. There is no controversy upon the latter subject. The partnership continued between Henning, Chambers and Johnston until the first day of February, 1914, when it was dissolved and a settlement had of its business and affairs as of December 31st, 1913. The dissolution was caused at that time by the death of Henning, on December 23rd, 1913. After the dissolution of Henning, Chambers & Co., a partnership to continue the same character of business was formed by Chambers, Johnston and McCraw. The representatives of Henning were settled with and the new partnership took over the assets and liabilities of the old partnership. The new firm continued in existence until April, 1914, when it was dissolved by the retirement of Johnston. A settlement of the business of the partnership was had and all matters between the members and the partnership were adjusted and settled, except one or more, minor, inconsequential items, which were necessarily continued at that time for final adjustment, in the future.

The matter out of which the litigation, in the present action, arose, transpired during the year, 1912, during, the existence of the partnership of Henning, Chambers & Co. and after the retirement of Dickinson. As the chief issue in the aetion is as to whether or not the transac[76]*76tion was one, which, came within the scope of the partnership, and was a matter, which, by the articles of the partnership contract, was a partnership business, it becomes necessary to set out the facts of it with some degree of particularity. In the endeavor to develop the. facts of the transaction, and to show its connection, or want of connection, with the partnership, the parties asked questions of witnesses to the number of between thirteen and fourteen thousand and received answers thereto, and in addition thereto filed many pages of exhibits, and have further urged the views of counsel in 580 pages of printed and very helpful briefs. As gathered from the evidence, the salient facts pertaining to the matter in controversy, are, that there existed in Indianapolis, Indiana, a public utility corporation, known as the Merchants Heat & Light Company, and of' which Edward L. McKee was president. Its capital stock consisted of five thousand shares of preferred, six per cent, stock, and the same amount of common stock, all of the par value of one hundred dollars, per share. It had been in operation for about ten years, during which time its common stock had increased in value from par to two hundred dollars per share. It had in its treasury one hundred thousand dollars, in money. It owed first and second mortgage bonds, outstanding, but not yet due, in the sum of $1,425,000.00, and other debts to the sum of three to four hundred thousand dollars, and on account of the increasing demands upon it, as a public utility, needed some additional funds for improvements and additions to its physical property. It had competition in the field of operation, in the person of another company, engaged in the same business, with.it, that of furnishing heat and light to the community "in which it was located. Field, Longstreth & Co., brokers and bond dealers in Cincinnati, Ohio, had conducted for it the sale of $1,000,000.00, par value, of its bonds, and were probably underwriters of that issue of bonds. Field knew to whom the bonds were sold and, from his association, with the company, he seems to have concluded, that the Merchants Heat & Light Co. had need of further “dealing” as to its stock, and he began negotiations with its president and the competing company to buy the common stock of both companies and to consolidate them, and preparatory to doing so to buy options to purchase the common stock of the Merchants Heat & Light Co. at one hundred and forty dollars per share, but on account of [77]

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Bluebook (online)
201 S.W. 488, 180 Ky. 73, 1918 Ky. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chambers-v-johnston-kyctapp-1918.