Denver v. Roane

99 U.S. 355, 25 L. Ed. 476, 1878 U.S. LEXIS 1548
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 18, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 99 U.S. 355 (Denver v. Roane) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Denver v. Roane, 99 U.S. 355, 25 L. Ed. 476, 1878 U.S. LEXIS 1548 (1879).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Strong

delivered the opinion of the court.'

The bill filed in this case was not an ordinary bill for the settlement of partnership accounts. James Hughes, the complainant’s testator, and James W. Denver and Charles F. Peck were in partnership as attorneys and counsellors-at-law from 1866 until the 18th of March, 1869. On that day it w&s agreed between them virtually that the general partnership should’ terminate ; that thereafter no new business should be received in partnership, and that any coming to the firm through, the mails should be equitably divided. The agreement, however, contained a stipulation that the business of the -firm theretofore received and then in hand should be closed up as rapidly as possible by the members of the firm “ as partners, under their original terms of association and in the firm name.”

Soon after, on the 13th of August, 1869, a further agreement was made to the effect that in case of the death of any one of the partners, his heirs or personal representatives, or their duly authorized agent, should receive one-third of the fees in cases nearly finished, and twenty-five per cent in other partnership cases. Denver acceded to this second agreement, with the understanding that before any such division should be made, at an}'- time, all partnership obligations should be first satisfied, proposing no new terms, only stating the legal effect. We think this was a close'd contract.

It is upon these two agreements the bill is founded. Hughes died on the 21st of October, 1873, and Roane, the executor of his will, has brought the present suit for a discovery, and to recover from the surviving partners the share of the testator in the fees received by them out of the partnership business which remained unfinished when the general partnership was dissolved. A decree having been.entered against the.defendants in the court below, they have appealed to this court, and have assigned numerous errors. Of most of them it will be' necessary to say but little, and, indeed, in regard to most of them there has *357 been hardly any controversy between the parties during the argument.

It. is first insisted by the appellant that the court below had no. competency or jurisdiction to entertain a bill for such relief as is prayed for, nor to give such a decree as the court gave, whereby it attempts to settle and close the affairs of a partnership by decreeing specific sums as legally due, and if so demandable at law, and providing for the further continuance of the partnership and collection by virtue of its decree of other like sums until the business of the partnership may end. Such is the first assignment of error. The objection misapprehends the nature of the case made by the bill, overlooks the facts, and does not state accurately the decree. That a bill in equity may be maintained by the personal representatives of a deceased partner against the survivors to compel an account, so far. as an account is possible, and for a discovery of the partnership property which came to their hands, is undeniable,,and such was the object of the present bill. When the firm was dissolved in' March, 1869, for general purposes, the agreement of dissolution stipulated that, as to the business then in hand, the members of the firm should continue partners, and should close it up. What that business was, the present defendants only could know, after the death of Hughes, for it was then left in their hands, and they only could know what fees had been received on account of it, A bill for discovery, as well as for distribution of the fees received, was, therefore, plainly within the province of a court of equity. And as the partners had agreed, as they did by the agreement of August, 1869, to divide those fees in certain proportions, it was quite competent for the court to enforce fulfilment of the contract, so far as was possible when the decree was made. • The court did not attempt to make a complete settlement of the affairs of the partnership. In the nature of the case that was impossible. Some of the partnership business remained unfinished, and fees uncertain in amount were yet to be collected. But so far as fees had been collected, the right to immediate distribution was complete. The agreement did not contemplate that all the fees collected might be held by the surviving partners until all the partnership business should be brought to an end, 'and it was, there *358 fore, quite proper to reserve consideration of the fees yet to be received after they shall have been earned.

An objection raised by several other assignments of error (particularly the sixth, seventh, eighth, ninth, eighteenth, and nineteenth) is, in substance, that the court erred in applying to a partnership between lawyers and claim agents the'principles, of the law of commercial partnerships, in regard to the modes of settlement of the same after the death of a partner, and in regard to the neglect of the business of such a firm by a partner; that by the decree no compensation is allowed to the survivors for carrying on the unfinished business, but that they are required to continue it as well for themselves as for the benefit of the deceased partner’s estate. We think these objections to the decree ought not to be sustained. We are not convinced that during his life Hughes (except perhaps in reference to a single case in charge of the firm) was guilty of such neglect, or violation of his duty to his partners, as should deprive him or his personal representative of a right to share in the profits of the partnership. In regard to the work done and the. fees received after his death, the parties, by their agreements, prescribed the rule for determining their rights as against each other. Having jointly undertaken the búsiness intrusted to the partnership, all the parties were under obligation to conduct it to the end. This duty they owed to the clients and to each other. And as to the unfinished business remaining with the firm oh the eighteenth day of March, 1869, the duty continued. The agreement provided for that. Now, in reference to this duty the law is clear.. “As there is an implied obligation on every partner to exercise due diligence and skill, and to devote his services and labors for the promotion of the common benefit of the concern, it follows that he must do it without any rewards or compensation, unless there be an express stipulation for compensation.” Story, Partn., sects. 182, 331; Caldwell v. Leiber, 7 Paige (N. Y.), 483. So it is held that where partnerships are equal, as was true in the present ease, and there is no stipulation in the partnership agreement for compensation to a surviving partner for settling up the partnership business, he is entitled to no compensation. Brown v. McFarlam, Executor, 41 Pa. St. 129; Beatty v. *359 Wray, 19 id. 516; Johnson v. Hartshorne, 52 N. Y. 173. This is the rule in regard to what are commonly called commercial partnerships, and the authorities cited refer to those. There may possibly be some reason for applying a different rule to cases of winding up partnerships between lawyers and other professional men, where the profits of the firm are the result solely of professional skill and labor. No adjudicated cases, however, with which we are acquainted, recognize any such distinction.

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Bluebook (online)
99 U.S. 355, 25 L. Ed. 476, 1878 U.S. LEXIS 1548, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/denver-v-roane-scotus-1879.