Duden v. Maloy

63 F. 183, 11 C.C.A. 119, 1894 U.S. App. LEXIS 2370
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedSeptember 26, 1894
DocketNo. 102
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 63 F. 183 (Duden v. Maloy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Duden v. Maloy, 63 F. 183, 11 C.C.A. 119, 1894 U.S. App. LEXIS 2370 (2d Cir. 1894).

Opinions

WHEELER, District Judge.

This suit was brought in a state court to close the affairs of a partnership, and recover an alleged balance due to the appellee, and was removed into the circuit court for the eastern district of New York, and proceeded with there in equity to an accounting before a master, and a decree for a balance due to the appellee, from which an appeal was taken to this court. The assignment of errors raises questions as to the rights of the parties upon the accounting, and to property remaining. The appellee was before this partnership a member of the firm of Duden & Co., lace dealers, having a principal house at Brussels, in Belgium, other houses at other places in Europe, and a store in New York. The appellant was employed in a responsible position in the New York store. In April, 1878, he was admitted as a partner under articles into the New York business. The arrangement contemplated a continuance of the former business, to which the appellant should contribute nothing from without but his personal services. The articles witnessed that the appellee, as party of the first part, and the appellant, as party of the second part, “agreed to become copartners to conduct the business of dealing in lace goods at the city of New York, under the firm name of Duden & Company, the partnership to commence on the fifth day of April, one thousand eight hundred and seventy-eight, and to terminate on the thirtieth day of June, one thousand eight hundred and eighty-[185]*185three, with liberty to either party to terminate the same at any time, by giving six months’ notice in writing to the other of his intention so to do;” that the party of the second part should devote Ms whole time and attention to the business; that true and correct hooks of account should be kept by him, or under Ms supervision, in which all the transactions of the copartnership should he properly entered; that an account of stock should he taken, and the hooks balanced, on the 30th day of June in each and every year; and-—•

“Third. It is mutually agreed that the net profits of the business shall he divided as follows: Seventy-five per centum ,thereof to the said Hermann Duden,, and twenty-five per centum thereof to the said M. Francis Maloy; such profits to be arrived at by deducting all the expenses of the business, including traveling expenses, all losses from had debts, interest on the capital employed in the United States business, and, in addition thereto, ten per centum each year on all goods remaining unsold and in stock at the city of New York or any part of the United Status at the time of Diking stock. And the party of the first part agrees with and guaranties to the said party of the second part, that his share of the profits shall amount to not less than five thousand dollars currency of the United States each and every year during the continuance of this copartnership.” “Fifth. And it is mutually understood and agreed that, in case the share of the profits of the party of the second part exceeds the sum of five thousand dollars currency per annum, he shall not draw' more than one thousand dollars of such excess, but the residue thereof shall he left in the business, and draw interest at the rate of seven per centum per annum, which interest may he drawn by 1he party of the second part on the last day of .Tune and December in each year, or credited to his account,, and left in the business at his option. Sixth. That, in case of the death of the party of the second part before the expiration of this agreement, his share of the profits up to the time of his death, including any amount that may remain due to him from previous years, shall he paid to his executors or administrators. In determining the amount so to he paid, the profits from the first day of July preceding his death up to the date of his death shall be computed to be the same as the profits for the corresponding period In the previous year. Seventh. Upon the expiration of this agreement, all profits that ma.y he standing to the credit of the party of the second part, including any interest that may be due thereon, shall be paid to the party of the second part, his executors or administrators, in four equal installments, payable in three, six, nine, and twelve months, respectively, from such expiration.”

An account of the stock of the store in New York was taken at the commencement. Goods for that store were furnished, and charged to it, by the house in Brussels and other European houses. Accounts of stock were taken on each 30th of June afterwards, and computations of profit and loss were thereupon made, as provided for in the partnership agreement, which, after that first taken June 30. 1878, showed profits for each year to and including the one ending June 30, 1883. In that year the partnership was extended five years upon the same terms mentioned, and land was bought, for which §8,000 was in the next year paid out of the proceeds of goods of the New York store, and upon which a factory w'as built and furnished for the manufacture of goods for that store, the cost of which was reckoned in computing profit and loss after-wards.- The account of stock and computation of June 30, .1884, showed a loss in the year preceding of $22,740.46, and that of June 30, 1885, a loss of $1,517. The appellant gave notice of termination of the partnership at the expiration of six months from its receipt, [186]*186which would be January 23,1886; and an account of stock was after-wards taken as of that date, and a computation made according to the articles, with proportionate reductions of the 10 per cent, for the part of a year expired, which showed a loss of $34,002.67. The appellant had overdrawn his share of profits, actual and guarantied, according to these computations, to the amount of $4,262.06. As the appellant, according to the master’s findings, had received this sum more than his share of profits, the master reported this sum to have been due from the appellant to the appellee at the close and as the result of the partnership business. The title to the lands bought for the factory stood in the name of one Myron Winslow. After this suit was brought the appellant brought a suit in the supreme court of the state against the appellee Winslow and others, as having interests, in which he obtained a final decree for a conveyance from Winslow and wife, by “a quitclaim deed unto the firm of Duden & Company, of Mew York, of all interest in and to said lands and premises, the subject-matter of this action, with the improvements therein and the appurtenances thereunto belonging, the same to inure to the benefit of the said copartnership of Duden & Company, of Mew York, according to the respective rights of the partners therein, including the above-named plaintiff.” Upon the bringing of that decree into this suit, the master herein was directed to take a further account, “on the theory that the ‘factory business,’ so-called, referred to in the testimony herein, was a partnership enterprise, and that the land, business, and appurtenances formed part of the assets of Duden & Co., of Mew York, at the dissolution of that partnership, and that all money paid out for land, factory buildings, machinery, appurtenances, labor therein, etc., together with all other like costs and disbursements incidental to the operation of the said business, are chargeable to the said firm of Duden & Co., of Mew York; and also to take and state the profits and losses from the said factory business with the other accounts of the said firm,” and the value of the good will of the firm of Duden & Co. at the beginning and at the end of this partnership.

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Related

Johnson v. Jackson
114 S.W. 260 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1908)
Ruggles v. Buckley
158 F. 950 (Sixth Circuit, 1908)
Maloy v. Duden
86 F. 402 (Second Circuit, 1898)

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Bluebook (online)
63 F. 183, 11 C.C.A. 119, 1894 U.S. App. LEXIS 2370, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duden-v-maloy-ca2-1894.