Driscoll v. Sullivan

115 N.E. 331, 186 Ind. 178, 1917 Ind. LEXIS 39
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 14, 1917
DocketNo. 22,735
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 115 N.E. 331 (Driscoll v. Sullivan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Driscoll v. Sullivan, 115 N.E. 331, 186 Ind. 178, 1917 Ind. LEXIS 39 (Ind. 1917).

Opinion

Spencer, J.

Appellee instituted this action against appellant and one Conners to recover his share of the profits of a special partnership between the parties. His complaint alleges that this partnership was organized by oral agreement in February, 1912, for the purpose of securing a contract with The Canadian Western Oil & Gas Company, Ltd., to dig a trench on properties of said company in the Province of Alberta, Canada, eighty miles in length and sufficient in size to receive and hold a ten-inch gas main, which main was also to be laid and covered; that pursuant to said oral agreement, in the month of March, 1912, the partnership [180]*180entered into a written contract with the oil and gas company to excavate said trench and to lay and cover the eighty miles of mains, and thereafter fully carried out the provisions of the written contract and performed the work to be done thereunder; that shortly before the work of digging the trench and laying the pipe therein was completed, appellee-was taken sick and compelled to return to his home in Muncle, Indiana, but left a competent employe to do the work in which he was engaged, so that the same did not suffer by reason of his absence and the partnership sustained no loss on account thereof. The complaint contains other allegations as to the moneys advanced and interests held by the several parties under the partnership agreement, the method of bookkeeping employed by the firm, and the profits derived from the work in hand; but these averments do not affect the questions presented as to the sufficiency of the pleading and need not here receive consideration in detail.

1. In support of his assertion that the trial court erred in overruling his demurrer to appellee’s complaint, appellant contends that the pleading is insufficient: (1) for its failure to allege that appellee performed all the conditions of the partnership agreement on his part to be performed, and (2) on account of its omission to state a sufficient excuse for not carrying out his part of the contract.

To quote from Thomas v. Hollingsworth (1913), 181 Ind. 411, at page 414, (103 N. E. 840): “Where two or more persons form a partnership for the purpose of acting together in a single transaction, as in this case, and that transaction is fully closed before the suit is brought so that nothing remains but the division, of the partnership assets, there is a termination of the partnership which will authorize one partner to maintain a suit in equity for an accounting against another [181]*181partner who has appropriated or is threatening to appropriate the firm assets.” Whether, under some circumstances, the plaintiff in an action of this character must show that he has fully performed all of the obligations placed on him by the partnership agreement is a question we need not here decide. In the present case it is certain that appellee’s complaint is sufficient to entitle him to relief. There is nothing in the partnership agreement as set out in the complaint which even tends to show that appellee’s participation in the profits of the undertaking is in any way dependent on his personal attention to the work in hand, and he expressly alleges that his absence therefrom, shortly before the contract was completed, caused no loss to the partnership or injury to the work. The demurrer admits the truth of each averment in the pleading and was properly overruled.

The remaining questions presented for decision depend primarily on a consideration of appellant’s contention that no partnership in fact existed between the parties; that the contract with the oil and gas company belonged to appellant personally; and that in order to carry out its provisions he borrowed money from appellee with which, in part, to finance the undertaking, and employed him to assist in the work. It is conceded that in return for his services so rendered appellee was to receive a fixed part of the profits, if any, and that the agreement between the parties, in so far as it related to the matter of compensation, was afterwards reduced to writing, as follows:

“Memorandum op Agreement made in triplicate this 30th day of March, A. D. T912.
Between: Timothy'J. Driscoll, now of the City of Lethbridge, in the Province of Alberta, Contractor, of the First ‘Part, and Patrick C. Conners, now of the said City óf Letherbridge, Contractor, of the Second Parí, and John L. Sullivan, [182]*182now of the said City of Lethbridge, formerly of Munsey, in the State of Indiana, United States of America, of the Third Part.
Whereas the party of the first part -by agreement in writing dated the 10th day of February, 1912, entered into a contract with the Canadian Western Natural Gas, Light, Heat and Power Company, Limited, to construct for the said Company a main pipe line from a point at or near Bow Island in the said Province to a point at or near the town of Monarch in said Province for the purpose of conducting or transporting natural gas,
And Whereas the said parties to this agreement have mutually agreed to enter into a partnership as Contractors for the purpose of carrying out and performing the construction work mentioned in the said contract with the above mentioned company, and for that particular venture only,
And Whereas all of the said parties to this agreement consider it advisable to enter into an agreement in writing in respect to the apportionment of profits and loss as between each of the parties hereto, respectively, in respect to the said partnership agreement.
Now This Agreement Witnesseth that in consideration of mutual benefit and of various sums of money contributed to the said partnership by the parties hereto, respectively, it is hereby ex- ” pressly agreed and understood that the profits of the partnership business shall be divided between the partners as follows, namely; To the said Timothy J. Driscoll nine (9) equal sixteenth parts thereof, and to the said Patrick C. Conners four (4) equal sixteenth parts thereof, and to the said John L. Sullivan the remaining three (3) equal sixteenth parts thereof; and all expenses and losses incurred in carrying on the partnership business shall be paid out of the earnings, and if they shall be insufficient, the deficiency shall be made up by the partners in the shares or proportions in which they are entitled to the profits of the business as aforesaid.
And it is Hereby Further Expressly Agreed and Understood that this agreement is entered into for the sole purpose of determining the division of the profits and losses amongst the parties hereto [183]*183as aforesaid, and for no other purpose, and this agreement shall not in any way affect or concern the aforesaid partnership business except insofar as it is hereby expressed and intended to affect the said partnership agreement.
This Agreement shall inure to the benefit of and be binding upon the parties hereto, their heirs, executors, administrators and assigns, respectively.
In Witness Whereof," etc.

2. 3. 4. In view of this instrument and of oral evidence supplementary thereto and corroborative thereof, it is idle to'contend that the decision of the trial court that a partnership existed is not sustained by the record. As was decided in Bacon v. Christian (1915), 184 Ind. 517, 521, 111 N. E.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
115 N.E. 331, 186 Ind. 178, 1917 Ind. LEXIS 39, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/driscoll-v-sullivan-ind-1917.