Estate of Adams & Lester v. Adams

257 S.W. 142, 215 Mo. App. 606, 1923 Mo. App. LEXIS 219
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 31, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 257 S.W. 142 (Estate of Adams & Lester v. Adams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of Adams & Lester v. Adams, 257 S.W. 142, 215 Mo. App. 606, 1923 Mo. App. LEXIS 219 (Mo. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

BLAND, J.

This is an appeal from the order of the circuit court distributing the assets of a partnership. The partnership was one between T. B. Adams and M. H. Lester and was entered into on March 10, 1897, by a written agreement. Under this contract the partnership conducted a retail drug business in the town of Norborne, Missouri, under the name of Adams & Lester. Lester died October 21, 1921, and the respondent, the surviving partner, was appointed and is now acting as administrator of the partnership estate. Amelia J. Lester was appointed and is now acting as administratrix of the individual estate of H. M. Lester, deceased.

The stock of goods and fixtures were destroyed by fire on November 18, 1921. There was a policy of fire insurance in the sum of $5000 on the property, which was paid and the money is now in the hands of the administrator of the partnership estate. On March 13, 1922, the respondent filed a petition in the probate court of Carroll county for an order of distribution of the partnership estate between himself as surviving partner and the appellant as administratrix of the estate of the deceased partner. In the petition the respondent stated that he had on hand the sum of $7247.68 in cash; that all debts and demands against the partnership estate had been paid and that no debts, claims or demands could legally be presented and allowed against said estate. The petitioner prayed that the sum of $3261.41 be paid to him for capital advanced in the organization of the partnership, and that the remainder be divided equally between *608 himself and appellant. The appellant filed an answer to the petition alleging that Adams had contributed the total sum of $6630.70 to the capital stock and Lester $3369.29 and that the amount of money in respondent’s hands to the extent of $5000, representing the insurance money, was capital stock and that the balance was profits and asked that the $5000 be distributed according to the contributions which each partner had made to the capital stock aforesaid. The probate court made an order of distribution in accordance with the theory of appellant and respondent appealed to the circuit court, resulting in a judgment in the latter court that Adams was entitled to $3261.41, the amount he contributed at the commencement of the partnership, which should first be paid to him, and that the remainder of the assets be equally divided between Adams and the Lester estate. The administratrix of that estate has appealed.

The material parts of the partnership agreement are as follows:

“This partnership agreement made and entered into this the tenth day of March Eighteen Hundred and Ninety-seven, Witnesseth: That Thos. B. Adams has purchased the entire stock of Drugs, Medicines, fixtures, etc., of E. E. Sibert which he furnishes for said partnership together with his labor & services; that M. H Lester furnishes his labor, services and experience, that after all expenses of said partnership and the sum of Two Hundred Dollars interest, on money borrowed by said Adams and put into the purchase of said stock, are paid the profits of said-partnership are to be shared equally.
“The profits are to be determined by an inventory to be taken each year on March the eighth or as soon thereafter as practicable. In each inventory the goods purchased by Adams from Sibert are to be inventoried at the price paid by Adams to Sibert; all other goods to be inventoried at their actual & exact cost.
“Said Adams agrees to buy all the goods necessary for the business of said firm and to discount the bills *609 therefor, said partnership to have the benefit of all discounts. After the payment of the two Hundred Dollars interest above referred to, neither M. H. Lester nor the partnership shall be held for, charged with or be liable for any money borrowed by Adams for the purchase of goods or for any other purpose or for any interest thereon.
“It is agreed and understood that M. H. Lester is a partner in the-profits ONLY and that he has no interest, in or claim on the purchase price paid by Adams to Sibert or in, or to, any cash or money put into or added to said business by said Adams. It is further agreed that each of said partners may draw from said business not to exceed the sum of Fifty-five Dollars per month or Six Hundred and Sixty Dollars per year.
“It is agreed that no purchases are to be made by one member of the partnership without consultation with and consent of the other member.
“Said Adams is to have the right to withdraw any money put in by him for the necessary purchase of stock at such times only as said partnership has the money to pay same, and if said cash so added is not withdrawn before the inventory is taken, it shall at that time be deducted in like manner as the capital stock from the inventory of the business. Each partner is to be charged with all goods he may take from said stock for the use of himself or family at the actual cost thereof only.”

The evidence shows that at the time of the fire the value of the goods and fixtures was $9500. The only witness to testify was the surviving partner, Adams. He testified that he and Lester took an inventory of the stock and fixtures every year after they went into business. The purpose of taking the inventory was mainly in order to meet the demands of the insurance .company in case of fire but was also in pursuance of their agreement. He further testified—

“As the years progressed our business was prosperous all the time from its beginning on down to the *610 time of the fire. We made money and each of us drew out each year an equal amount of profits and each year we left in an equal amount of profits, according to our agreement. We each left in a certain amount of our profits. An equal amount was left by each of us. Mr. Lester left in just as much of his profits as I left in of my profits. Our original written contract provided that I was to furnish money to buy additions to the stock and that I was to furnish money to discount the bills. ‘I- was to furnish the money in case we needed to furnish any.’ The business was to sustain itself. I never furnished any money except the original Sibert stock, amounting to $3261.41. All of the other money that went into the partnership business was contributed by the two partners out of the profits of the business. ‘Yes, sir, that was the way the business was to grow, by equal contributions.’ ‘By the Court: And that was the way it was to grow? A. Yes, sir. ’ After the first year or two I will say that all the new purchases of stock was made out of profits of the business and that continued up to the time of the fire.
“These profits that each of us left in the business from year to year were to mingle with the original contribution of the Sibert stock. The profits only were put into merchandise and the merchandise that the profits purchased was mingled with the original Sibert stock and handled as one stock of goods.”

There is no contention but that the value of the Sibert stock put into the partnership at its organization by Adams was $3261.41.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
257 S.W. 142, 215 Mo. App. 606, 1923 Mo. App. LEXIS 219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-adams-lester-v-adams-moctapp-1923.