Clark v. Warden

10 Neb. 87
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 10 Neb. 87 (Clark v. Warden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clark v. Warden, 10 Neb. 87 (Neb. 1880).

Opinion

Cobb, J.

The only question in this case arises upon that part of the decree which disallows interest to the plaintiff on the sum contributed to the firm by him in excess of that contributed by the defendant.

Upon first reading the authorities cited by counsel on either side at the argument, there would seem to be some conflict on this question of the right of a partner to interest on funds by him contributed to the capital of the firm, in excess of those contributed by his equal co-partner and used in the co-partnership business during the existence of the partnership. But upon a close examination and an analysis of the cases nearly all apparent conflict disappears.

In the case at bar there were no written articles of co-partnership, nor is the proof as to the terms of the verbal contract quite as ample as might be. It seems to have been rather the outgrowth of several different conversations than one definite and connected contract. The plaintiff was engaged in carrying on a [89]*89livery business on Ninth street, in the city of Omaha, where he had a 'stock of horses, carriages, harness, etc. He had also bought a lot up town for the purpose of building a stable on it, and moving his business thereto. On this lot he had paid $5000, and given a mortgage for $7500, the balance of the purchase money. By the termsjof the co-partnership this property, the livery stock, which was estimated at $14,000, and the said lot at $5000, making $19,000, was put into the partnership. It was the contract that the plaintiff and defendant were to be equal partners. At the trial before the referee plaintiff was a witness in his own behalf. His counsel put the following questions to him:

Q. What was the agreement as to the amount of property and capital you should put in and Warden should put in ?

A. I turned in my stock for so much, and he was to put in so much.

Q. You refer to your livery stock ?

A. Yes, sir.
Q. Was there any agreement as to the amount at which it should be turned in ?
A. Yes, sir; at $14,000.
Q. What else was you to put into the concern ?
A. A lot on Fifteenth and Farnham.
Q. At what price was it to be put in?
A. Twelve thousand dollars; just what I paid for it.
Q. You were to pay $12,000 ?
Q. And had paid $5,000 ?
Q. You put in that lot subject to the incumbrance?
A. Yes, sir, from the time it was bought.
Q. Then you had $5,000 interest in the lot ?

[90]*90A. Tes, sir.

Q. That made $19,000 with the livery stock ?

Q. In the agreement of partnership was there any agreement made as to the capital stock put in by each ?

A. ITe was to put in what I did; the same amount, and be an equal partner.
Q. State what Mr. Warden agreed to put in, and what he did put in.
A. I do not know just what he did put in. I have had no settlement with him.
Q. In what form was he to put in his capital ?

A. He was to build that stable and was to put up a repository and have buggies to sell. He said he would put up that barn.

Q. And put in the rest some other way ?
Q. State if Mr. Warden did build the barn ?

Q. What else, if anything, did he put into the concern at the time, or soon after the time when you went into the partnership ?

A. He gave me fourteen hundred dollars to buy horses, and we fetched them back and sold them or traded them off, on the building.

Q. What else ?
A. That is the only money I remember of getting.

I have quoted this testimony at considerable length for the purpose of showing the rather indefinite character of the agreement as to the time when the amount of capital, to be put in by the defendant, was to be made equal to that put in by the plaintiff in livery stock and the city lot, and for the further purpose of showing the entire absence of evidence that it was in the mind of either of the parties to the agreement to [91]*91provide for the payment of interest on any sum which either might be in arrear as compared to that put in by his co-partner. Erom the whole case it is apparent that the chief if not the only reason which impelled the plaintiff to take in a partner was to obtain means for the erection of the new building on 15th and Earn-ham streets. And having secured this by the agreement of the defendant to go on and erect the building, he does not seem to have cared to hold him strictly to time, for paying into the firm whatever sum might still be required to make his part equal to that put in by the plaintiff; nor does it seem that it was known by either party until long after the completion and occupancy of the new building whether the cost of the same would not equal the amount put into the firm by the plaintiff

It appears as well from the evidence as from the report of the referee that the said new building was completed by defendant some time in September following the date of the co-partnership, May 1, 1874, at a cost of $13,755.99 — being nearly five thousand dollars less than the amount contributed to the partnership fund by the plaintiff; but that so little importance was attached to such deficiency that plaintiff did not, until a comparatively recent period, even inquire the cost of said building; and it appears probable that he was quite surprised to learn that such cost did not nearly equal the sum contributed to said business by him.

It appears from the evidence and the report of the referee that the amounts severally drawn out of the business by the plaintiff and by the defendant, each of the four and a half years of the partnership, have been nearly equal, but that during such time the defendant has from time to time paid in money considerably in excess of that paid in during the same time by the [92]*92plaintiff, so that at the time of the commencement of this action the deficiency of the defendant amounted to only $594.42.

Mr. Justice Story says in Dexter v. Arnold et al., 3 Mason, 284: “ Interest is not allowed upon partnership accounts generally until after a balance is struck, or a balance is struck on a settlement between the partners, unless the parties have otherwise agreed or acted in their partnership concerns.” This I understand to be the true rule, and although some of the cases seem to recognize a different one, yet I think that upon a close examination it will be found that where interest has been allowed the cases have been controlled by special facts not presented by the ease at bar.

The case of Stoughton v. Lynch was twice before the court of chancery of the state of New York. 1 Johns. Ch., 467. 2 Id., 210.

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Bluebook (online)
10 Neb. 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-warden-neb-1880.