Doncourt v. Denton

55 Misc. 594, 105 N.Y.S. 906
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 15, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 55 Misc. 594 (Doncourt v. Denton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Doncourt v. Denton, 55 Misc. 594, 105 N.Y.S. 906 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1907).

Opinion

Kelly, J.

The fair preponderance of the evidence establishes the fact of a partnership between plaintiff’s testator and the defendant, for the purpose of clearing up woodland in Hempstead and Douglaston and selling the timber. There was an agreement" in writing for sharing profits and losses equally. The defendant contributed the money necessary, in the first instance. Two parcels of land, the Berry and Douglas tracts, were purchased outright, title being taken in defendant’s name. As to these two parcels, it was provided that, after repayment of all advances made by defendant, any of the land remaining was to be divided equally between the parties. On other parcels, the Grace-Horsfield and Meakin tracts, the right to remove the timber was acquired. Two other parcels of land are involved, property purchased from John Pine and the estate of Sarah Bemsen. I find that this land was in the same category as the GraceHorsfield and Meakin properties. The firm had the right to remove and sell the timber, but there is no evidence of any agreement by which Doncourt had any interest in the fee. This partnership arrangement was made in 1880. It provided for no definite term. The work of clearing up the land was-to go on under the supervision of Doncourt. Denton was to receive all the money, pay the bills and render statements to Doncourt at regular intervals. .The return was to come from the sales of the timber. As the Berry and Douglas land was cleared, it rose in value, and Denton had the [596]*596right to sell it. The final balance was to be struck when the land was sold, or when the work of clearing and the sale of the wood was finished. In any case, Denton was to get back his outlay in full with interest. If any of the land remained, it belonged to Denton & Doncourt, share and share alike; and provision was made for a partition and the execution of deeds by Denton.

The defendant, while in court, did not take the witness stand. Of course, his testimony as to personal transactions with his deceased associate was incompetent, if the plaintiff objected to it. I do not know whether objection would have been made or not. There was nothing illegal or improper in an offer by defendant to testify, but the offer was not made. The answer is full of specific denials of facts alleged in the complaint and proved on the trial without contradiction. On the issue as to partnership, defendant, in his answer and through his counsel on the trial, repeatedly denied a partnership, asserting that the arrangement was a “joint venture.”. For the purposes of this action, the distinction is not apparent. As Judge O’Brien says, in Wilcox v. Pratt, 125 N. Y. 688: “It is not necessary to inquire whether there was a partnership between the parties in the technical legal' sense of that term. Whether it was a partnership or a joint enterprise, the contract is to be enforced and the rights and liabilities of the parties determined upon the same principles as are applied by courts of equity to partnership transactions. (King v. Barnes, 109 N. Y. 267.)” The relationship had all the indicia of partnership. There was the use of a firm name and printed letter-heads and billheads in the firm name “ Denton & Doncourt,” with the names of the parties underneath. There was a joint enterprise with a provision for sharing the profits and losses—one man contributing the money, the other his experience and labor. Such contracts are not unusual, and it is difficult to see where any of the essentials of a partnership are lacking.

The actual work in the field went on from 1880 to 1885, or thereabouts. By that time a large part of the land had been cleared up. Denton supplied the money, Doncourt superintended the work. Denton made statements from time [597]*597to time. He pleads a settlement in 1885 and payment of a lump sum of $3,026.46 to Doncourt, in full settlement of all his claims, and alleges that it was then agreed that the joint venture should be abandoned and that the relations of the parties should be at an end. But there was no proof of any such settlement; on the contrary, it is shown that the relationship continued, and writings by the defendant are in evidence, inconsistent with this allegation in his answer. It is alleged that there was an account stated in January, 1891, and that Doncourt then abandoned the agreement. This, it will be observed, is inconsistent with the last preceding defense—one or the other must be untrue. If Doncourt abandoned the contract and surrendered all his rights on payment of the $3,026.46 in July, 1885, there was no necessity of a further abandonment six years later. The evidence in support of the alleged settlement on account stated in 1891 comes from the wife and daughter of defendant. Without criticising either witness, and having in mind the lapse of time, the infirmities of memory and the natural feeling of a wife and daughter, it is sufficient to say that the testimony is not sufficient to warrant a finding in defendant’s favor. I have given the evidence of these two ladies careful attention and I have examined the statement in lead pencil involving so many years’ dealings and exhibiting a debit balance of some $18,000. I do not think that Doncourt ever intended to abrogate the partnership and surrender all his rights on the brief examination which he must have necessarily made of this paper, then exhibited to him for the first time. I think the testimony is consistent with a statement by Doncourt that he would abandon present demands for payment or sale of the property remaining, leaving it to Denton to work it out and sell the land remaining, but of which the profits, if any, must come, in his own good time. I do not think a partnership which had existed for eleven years was wiped out in any such summary fashion.

But the strongest proof against defendant’s claim is found in his own handwriting. On July 15, 1892, Denton wrote a letter to Doncourt concerning some work of sawing timber on the land at Douglaston and stating that he, Denton, had [598]*598made an agreement with one Southard to do the work, " we to pull his engine and boiler from Douglaston depot to the woods, he to load and unload same, we to pay him three-fourths of a cent per foot for sawing any and all'material that we might want to have done. This is better than we could do with Oallister, as he would only pay $40 for the mill.” It is impossible to read this letter and believe the allegation in the answer that all relationship of the parties had terminated in 1891.

Again we find the strongest contradiction of defendant in his own letters written to the attorney Brainerd, who had correspondence with him, in 1895 and 1899, relative to an accounting between Doncourt and defendant.

There was vigorous opposition to the introduction of this correspondence on the trial; defendant insisting on the application of the rule that writings or statements made in the effort to compromise or adjust a dispute must not be taken against a party who is endeavoring to “ buy his peace.” I thought, at the trial, that the correspondence was admissible, but, at defendant’s insistence, took the matter under advisement. To save his rights, I now admit this correspondence, noting an exception to the defendant, because, in my opinion, this correspondence does not come within the class excluded for the reasons referred to. There was no litigation pending or threatened when attorney Brainerd wrote to Den-ton. He asked" for an accounting. Denton promptly answered, admitting his willingness to account, and his willingness to convey half the property to Doncourt on receiving the amount which he insisted was due him.

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Related

Smith v. Maine
145 Misc. 521 (New York Supreme Court, 1932)
Doncourt v. Denton
115 N.Y.S. 1118 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1909)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
55 Misc. 594, 105 N.Y.S. 906, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doncourt-v-denton-nysupct-1907.