Easley v. Clay

16 S.W.2d 888, 1929 Tex. App. LEXIS 516
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 6, 1929
DocketNo. 12121.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 16 S.W.2d 888 (Easley v. Clay) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Easley v. Clay, 16 S.W.2d 888, 1929 Tex. App. LEXIS 516 (Tex. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

BUCK, J.

James M. Easley filed suit in Taylor county against I-I. R. Clay of Tarrant county for partnership accounting. He alleged that plaintiff in error, hereinafter called plaintiff below, and defendant in error, hereinafter called defendant, had agreed, during the year 1917, to go into the cattle business together, each to pay into the business 50 ppr cent, of the needed capital. They were to buy cattle, fatten them for market, and sell them. Each partner was to bear one-half of the expenses incurred, and receive one-half of any profits, or to bear one-half of any losses. There was a considerable loss sustaine'd. Plaintiff prayed for an accounting and that he have Judgment in such amount as the evidence showed was due him.

The original petition is not in the transcript. The first pleading shown in the record is plaintiff’s first amended original petition filed in Tarrant county, the cause, it appears, having been transferred from Taylor county to Tarrant county on defendant’s plea of privilege.

This amended petition was filed November 5, 1927. In this petition plaintiff prayed for an accounting, and judgment against defendant for such amount as found to be due plaintiff, alleged to be one-half of $6,916, which was alleged to have been improperly withdrawn from the partnership by defendant, in addition to one-half of $7,403.44, which plaintiff alleged was due him for expenses incurred and paid in attending to the partnership affairs. This list of expenses incurred -by plaintiff covers some 27 to 29 pages of the transcript, and includes items of expenses from July 12, 1917, to January 10, 1927, for the expenditure of which plaintiff asks a recovery.

Defendant answered plaintiff’s original petition by an original answer filed September 27, 1926, and by an amended answer filed October 26, 1926. He pleaded both the two years and the four years statutes of limitation. He further sets out items of partnership expenses which he paid, and had stood good for, and pleaded for judgment against the plaintiff in the sum of $9,098.29. Plaintiff pleaded as to defendant’s cross-action the four years statute of limitation.

The cause was tried by the court, without the intervention of a jury, and the court found that defendant had expended in the interest of the partnership affairs $9,400 more than plaintiff had expended, and gave judgment for defendant in the sum of $4,700. From this judgment the plaintiff has appealed.

Opinion.

The only question presented on this appeal is that all of the items set up in defendant’s cross-action were barred by the four years statute of limitation, and the court erred in rendering judgment against plaintiff on such items.

The evidence shows that the last of the cattle owned by the partnership were sold in June, 1920. Appellant urges that the sale of the last of the partnership effects marks the time from which limitation should - begin to run.

The statute of limitation governing actions . of partnership accounting is article 5527, §3:

“There shall be commenced and prosecuted within four years after the cause of action shall have accrued, and not afterward, all actions or suits in court of the following description: ⅜'-⅜ *
*889 “3. Actions by one partner'against his co-partner for a settlement of the partnership, accounts, or upon mutual and current accounts concerning the trade of merchandise between merchant and merchant, their factors or agents; and the cause of action shall be considered as having accrued on a cessation of the dealings in which they were interested together.”

Plaintiff had five or six pages of items of expense alleged to have been incurred subsequent to June, 1920, a number during each year down to January, 1927. He was seeking to recover for items of expense incurred subsequent to four years after the cattle had all been disposed of. Likewise, defendant set up various items of alleged partnership expense incurred by him, subsequent to the sale of the last cattle, and more than four years subsequent thereto.

That the parties composing the partnership considered that they were still partners subsequent to the sale of the cattle in 1920 is shown by their evidence, plaintiff below testifying:

“I did not say on yesterday that when I paid the ¡*¡8,000.00 to the Guaranty Oattle Loan Company, that I considered that I was out of the Olay and Easley cattle transaction. The agreement then was that the Clay and Easley operations would be continued as a partnership business, and that we would buy other cattle and I went ahead and made this payment on their word and promise that they would be continued. ⅞ * * I did not keep stubs of the drafts because I expected to make an accounting with Mr. Clay on a statement that would be produced by the Guaranty Cattle Loan Company. * * * I found that I owed them a balance after that $8,000.00 was paid; I have never paid that balance. ⅜ * * All our cattle had been sold at that time, but we expected to buy more; we did not buy any more, but I spent some money inspecting other cattle. I charged up here- the expense I incurred when I was going around inspecting cattle that it was contemplated would be both for Clay and Easley and when I was done at Mr. Clay’s request, and with his approval. * * * I called on Mr. Clay to render me an account in writing ; I have written him letters asking him to account and execute this contract as it was .agreed by Swift several times, and I finally had to bring it to a show-down with this suit.”

Defendant testified:

“After all these other items were paid, we still owed the Guaranty Cattle Loan Company over $S,000.00, and we still owe that to them; it has not been paid ⅜ * * in fact, they were carrying $12,000.00 then, unsecured papers when wo shipped these cattle to my ranch. * ⅜ ⅜ It is true that I do not now owe Mr. Swift or the Guaranty Cattle Loan Company anything on this $20,000.00 obligation, the last payment on that obligation was made on December 12, 1927. * * * I have offered to account to Mr. Easley; I have offered to do so at various times and particularly about 1925. When I was officing in the Dan Waggoner Building, Mr. Easley would come in the office and ask if I had ever paid anything on the note at the First National Bank and on the $20,000.00 I owed Swift, and I told him what I had done at the First National Bank * * * that X was keeping the interest up, and that I had paid Mr. Swift $6,414.00 on the mortgage.”

With reference to a government claim arising out of this partnership, which was testified to be pending in the courts of Kansas, at the time this suit was tried, defendant tes-, tified:

“1 knew that Mr. Easley claimed some big damages on account of the seven-bar steers. I did help to get that money to Mr. Swift (of the Guaranty Cattle Loan Company). All of that money did not come out of the Montgomery & Easley steers (another partnership in which Easley was interested); I cannot say that practically all of it came out of those cattle. I think the whole claim was about forty odd hundred dollars, and I think proportionately, the way we settled with Mr. Nations that X was possibly interested to the extent of $1,000.00 — I mean the firm of Clay & Easley. I think our firm originally claimed $7,568.67; Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
16 S.W.2d 888, 1929 Tex. App. LEXIS 516, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/easley-v-clay-texapp-1929.