Coffinberry v. Blakeslee

28 Ohio C.C. Dec. 462, 22 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 34, 1908 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 376
CourtCuyahoga Circuit Court
DecidedMay 18, 1908
StatusPublished

This text of 28 Ohio C.C. Dec. 462 (Coffinberry v. Blakeslee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coffinberry v. Blakeslee, 28 Ohio C.C. Dec. 462, 22 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 34, 1908 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 376 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1908).

Opinion

HENRY, J.

In this appeal the plaintiff seeks an accounting from defendant of profits of an alleged partnership formed with him about January 10, 1901, to deal in oil leases in and about Beaumont, Texas. Some agreement was admittedly entered into between the parties at Forth Worth, Texas, about that time. The plaintiff, Coffinberry,-was sojourning in that city in the employ, as right-of-way agent, of a Cleveland traction syndicate, who were then building an electric road in Texas. The defendant. Blakeslee, a lawyer and oil operator, was in Texas on a hunting trip, and a day or two after the great oil strike in Beaumont they met at a hotel or boarding house in Fort Worth. They had had previous dealings together. Plaintiff then and there called to defendant’s attention a newspaper report of the Beaumont oil strike. After talking the matter over, defendant started promptly for Beaumont, pursuant to an agreement which plaintiff claims provided that defendant was to give his whole time and attention to the business, receive a salary of $5 a day and expenses, and furnish three-fourths of the funds necessary for acquiring oil leases and for carrying on the business of the partnership; plaintiff on his part to furnish the other one-fourth of the funds of salary and expenses, and the profits and losses of the partnership to be divided between them in the ration of three-fourths to defendant and one-fourth to plaintiff.

Defendant’s version of the understanding is that because of certain inducements held out to him by plaintiff in respect to a [464]*464division of expected commissions from a real estate deal connected with, the traction enterprise, he offered to let plaintiff in with him to the extent of a quarter interest in such leases as he might thereafter acquire in Beaumont, and think proper to share with plaintiff.

The plaintiff insists that the partnership arrangement in regard to dealing in oil leases, had no connection whatever with the traction real estate deal. The latter, he claims, was as follows :

Part of a certain property known as the Handley farm was wanted by the traction company for park and other purposes in ease certain pending legislation affecting that feature of their business should become a law. In order to get what the traction company required, it was necessary to take the whole farm, and plaintiff expected that the residue, which would be rendered very ■valuable in case the traction company used the part it required in the manner contemplated, might be so handled as to realize to him a commission of $800 or $1,000 and possibly other profits in addition thereto, through the organization of a real estate company and the sale of lots.

In talking the matter over in Fort "Worth w-ith defendant, plaintiff sought and obtained the latter’s permission to use his name as that of the real purchaser, whom plaintiff represented in his negotiations for the acquisition of the Handley farm. This ruse was to be resorted to, to prevent the seller from raising his price, as it was expected he would do if he were informed that the traction company was the purchaser. The plaintiff actually took an option in defendant’s name, but through failure of the pending legislation the traction company permitted it to lapse. Later on, however, it was renewed in plaintiff’s name and the property taken over'by the traction company. Plaintiff was at that time working on a salary for the traction company, and as now appears, he never realized his expectations, of profit from the Handley deal. So at least we find from all the evidence.

Defendant, within a month or two after arriving -at Beaumont, acquired a number of valuable oil leases out of which over $25,000 profit was derived. He kept up, meanwhile, a constant [465]*465correspondence with plaintiff, the whole of which, taken together, is very voluminous. It is written in a very friendly, intimate and colloquial style, intended evidently to be humorous. It became evident, however, that as soon as defendant’s large success was assured, he did not wish to divide with plaintiff on the basis then and now claimed by the latter. Much is said about the fading prospects of profit from the Handley deal, and defendant intimates more and more pointedly that he intends that plaintiff’s participation in the profits of the oil deals shall depend very largely on his payment of at least $400 to defendant, being one-half of the expected profit from the Handley deal. Finally on April 9th, defendant plainly exercises his undoubted right of terminating the partnership unequivocally. In the meanwhile, however, on January 13, 1901, at the very inception of the enterprise, defendant had written to plaintiff, expressly recognizing the existence of some agreement between them respecting his dealing in oil leases, for he speaks of enlarging their enterprise so as to include dealing in vacant property, and says “Of course you would be in that same as oil leases, ” etc.

On January 17, 1901, defendant writes to plaintiff saying: “Send me a draft at once for $625. I will send you a check at once in return for $500 and a receipt for $125 on all of your one-quarter costs and expenses.”

On February 9, 1901, defendant writes “We couldn’t hire a man to do what I did yesterday and today for $50 and I get $10 for it, ’ ’ referring plainly to his per diem of $5.

On February 19, 1901, defendant wrote a letter clearly recognizing the terms of the original agreement as claimed by plaintiff, except the Handley feature, which he still insists was a part of the agreement, but which in the aspect it had then assumed, he accepts. In his usual whimsical vein the defendant writes of an alleged meeting between himself and the field man, who was none other than himself, as the entire correspondence clearly discloses. He says, “We held a meeting at my office late last night and the field man said we were probably being worked some on that commission, but as the chances are so strong that there won’t be any commission to divide, that he would move to [466]*466have the report accepted and spread upon the minutes of the meeting, also on the boobs of the company, and that onr share be accepted as offered, viz: $400 ont of the $886 and that we declare the original compact as to your having one-fourth of the profits, if any, and stand one-fourth of the losses on all deals, commissions, etc., made by me in this field, and that we furnish you as soon as convenient a receipt for the $125 you have paid in and a statement of the terms on which you are in, so that nothing can be construed to tie up, hamper or hinder the free and full control of ■ all business by our most worthy and competent field man, whose name modesty forbids me to mention.”

As a matter of fact, plaintiff’s letters to defendant, to which this was the reply, contained no outright offer to pay defendant $400 at all events, but only an offer to pay $400 out of the $886, commissions which plaintiff expected to realize out of the Handley deal.

On February 11, 1901, plaintiff had written defendant:

“X have paid $100 down on the Handley farm and am having abstract made out and if bill becomes a law will close at once. Will take deed in my own name as trustee. The company w.'U want about 200 acres of it. Will have to let that go at cost, expect to get $2 per acre commission on balance of 440 acres. ’ ’

On February 16, 1901, plaintiff wrote:

“X had concluded some days since to allow our field man $400 out of the $886 if he made an early report and made it full.”

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Bluebook (online)
28 Ohio C.C. Dec. 462, 22 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 34, 1908 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 376, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coffinberry-v-blakeslee-ohcirctcuyahoga-1908.