Dolenga v. Lipka

195 N.W. 90, 224 Mich. 276, 1923 Mich. LEXIS 922
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 1, 1923
DocketNo. 81.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 195 N.W. 90 (Dolenga v. Lipka) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dolenga v. Lipka, 195 N.W. 90, 224 Mich. 276, 1923 Mich. LEXIS 922 (Mich. 1923).

Opinion

Steere, J.

This suit is here on an appeal from an order of the Wayne county circuit court, in chancery, appointing a receiver “to take full and complete charge of the business and property of the Versailles Baking Company, with place of business at No. 5409 (old number 1129) Chene street, with the usual powers incident to the office of receiver,” etc.

The Versailles Baking Company was organized as a partnership on November 1, 1919, with a stated capitalization of $6,000, the partners, with equal interest, being George Bergler, Stanislaw Grzelak, Mieczyslaw Lipka and Wladyslaw Marcinkowski, of Wayne county, Michigan. Soon after the organization Marcinkowski by mutual consent of all the partners sold his one-quarter interest to Joseph Skoczen and does not figure in subsequent proceedings. Amongst other things, the articles of copartnership provide for the conduct of a bakery business at the location described, which the partnership had acquired under a land contract at a purchase price of $19,000, that regular books shall be kept of the business with right of inspection by all partners, daily deposit of receipts in bank and payment of obligations *278 by check, an accounting every three months and debts paid, profits shown to be disposed of by distributing one-half to the partners as their interests may appear, one-half to remain in the treasury for use in said business as the majority may determine, that an outside party buying the interest of a member of the firm cannot become a copartner without consent of the remaining members, the concluding paragraph being as follows:

“Upon the final dissolution of the firm, by agreement or otherwise, the said business shall be wound up, the debts of the copartnership paid and the surplus .divided amongst the copartners according to their interest therein.”

The firm apparently started auspiciously and developed a good business which, however, was soon jeopardized by dissensions amongst its members which became so strenuous as to threaten its successful continuance. In this defendant Lipka was an active if not leading participant. Plaintiff, Dolenga, was engaged in the automobile business with his garage in that locality. He had done considerable repair work on the baking company’s automobiles and was acquainted with members of the firm, especially with Lipka of whom he seems to have had a good opinion at that time. Finding that his bills were not always as promptly paid as he expected, he spoke to Lipka about it, who assured him they were doing a good business but could not then pay those claims because the enterprise was too much hampered by quarrels amongst the partners to be successful, and broached the subject of buying out the other members of the firm. Lipka testified these interviews were only with reference to Dolenga lending him money to buy out his partners, while Dolenga charged in his bill and testified at the hearing that Lipka showed him a statement from the *279 books of the firm showing it was doing a prosperous business and proposed that Dolenga furnish the money to obtain contracts or options from the others to sell their interests and after acquiring them they would have an accounting and' each have a half interest in the business which they would continue as equal partners. They had several interviews on the subject, until Dolenga finally accepted the proposition and furnished Lipka money to secure the interests of Bergler and Grzelak from whom Lipka took assignments in his own name, explaining when Dolenga objected to his having done so that it was necessary to adopt that method on account of their articles of co-partnership, promising to assign them to Dolenga, telling him he had arranged to secure the interest of Skoczen.

Their agreement for an equal partnership was entered into about March 20,1920, as Dolenga claimed. On March 23, 1920, Lipka secured an agreement to sell from Bergler and Grzelak, but on April 27, 1920, Skoczen commenced a suit in chancery, entitled Skoczen v. Lipka, charging the latter with having appropriated to his own use while manager large sums of money from receipts of their business, refusing to come to an accounting as provided in their partner-' ship agreement, and other misconduct, asking for dissolution of the copartnership, a receiver and an accounting. The court in that case appointed a receiver, about May 15, 1920, who took possession of the business from Lipka for the purpose of winding up its affairs. Dolenga thereupon, to save the business and with Lipka’s knowledge and consent, made a verbal deal with Skoczen to secure his interest in the partnership when, as he alleges, Lipka “went behind plaintiff’s back” and induced defendant Dombrowski, his father-in-law, to buy the interest of Skoczen. Lipka thereafter continued the business with his father-in- *280 law as a partner and denied that Dolenga ever had any interest in it. The amount of money actually furnished by Dolenga is in dispute but Lipká admits having received from him $1,500 which he contends, as before stated, was but a loan — on what security, at what rate of interest or for how long he does not state.

Plaintiff then filed this bill to impress a trust upon the interests of Bergler and Grzelak acquired by Lipka for him under their agreement of partnership, for a dissolution of said partnership, an accounting, and appointment of a receiver to wind up the business. After a full hearing upon the merits of the controversy the court delivered an oral finding “that the bargain as entered into between the plaintiff and defendant was as claimed by the plaintiff,” reviewing the testimony and giving his reasons therefor.

Plaintiff’s bill was filed June 22, 1920, followed by various dilatory and interlocutory proceedings, including substitution of counsel, covering some 50 pages of the record which need not be detailed, and the case came to hearing February 27, 1922. On April 12, 1922, the court made an order referring the cause to a circuit court commissioner of Wayne county to take an accounting—

“pursuant to the prayer in plaintiff’s bill of complaint, of all of the dealings of the defendants with the affairs of the Versailles Baking Company, a partnership, and especially as to the condition of said business, its assets and liabilities, on or about March 23, 1920, when the defendant, Lipka, acquired in trust for the plaintiff an option upon the two one-quarter interests in the partnership of the defendants, George Bergler and Stanislaw Grzelak, pursuant to which the defendant, Lipka, acquired assignments of said interests in trust for the plaintiff, namely, that of George Bergler on April 12, 1920, and Stanislaw Grzelak on May 19, 1920;” etc.

This order was not appealed from, but when, on *281 May 4,1922, the order appointing a receiver was made and entered, appeal from it was taken as stated.

The findings and reasons therefor by the court upon the merits of a case do not constitute a judgment, or decree, and there being no final decree they are for consideration here only to the question of whether in the interlocutory order of May 4th appointing a receiver there was an abuse of discretion. The order is, however, necessarily based on a finding by the court that a copartnership agreement was entered into between Lipka and plaintiff as the latter claims.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
195 N.W. 90, 224 Mich. 276, 1923 Mich. LEXIS 922, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dolenga-v-lipka-mich-1923.