Filbrun v. Ivers

92 Mo. 388
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 15, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 92 Mo. 388 (Filbrun v. Ivers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Filbrun v. Ivers, 92 Mo. 388 (Mo. 1887).

Opinion

Rat, J.

This action was brought to settle the mercantile partnership entered into between plaintiff and defendant in 1863, under the name and style of Filbrun & Ivers, and continued until July, 1880, when the same was dissolved. Plaintiff, Filbrun, at this date went out, leaving defendant, Ivers, in possession and control of' the store, goods, notes, book accounts, etc. There was no adjustment of the accounts of said firm, or of the individual accounts of plaintiff and defendant with said firm at the time of said dissolution. Defendant, Ivers,, continued, from said July, 1880, to carry on the business-until May, 1882, when this suit was begun, and a receiver appointed, who, thereupon, took possession of the partnership stock. After the pleadings were made up in said cause a referee was appointed, by order of the court, to state the account between said parties. The report of the referee filed in the cause was as follows :

“I find from the books of the late firm and evidence as follows:

[391]*391RESOURCES.

Due them on personal accounts, per petty ledger.................................$ 1,144 37

Due them on personal accounts, per general ledger................................. 2,089 76

Bonds, notes and stock on hand............ 5,017 99

Freight bills due by sundry persons........ 61 55

Proceeds from sale of property reported by receiver................................. 969 88

Due from John Ivers on open account........ 9,079 05

Due by John H. Filbrun on open account____ 6,504 43

Total................................... .$24,907 03

LIABILITIES.

Due John Ivers amount account paid Cape County Mills............................$ 144 15

Due John Ivers for amount due on a promissory note for $4,000, dated January 9, 1880, payable to the order of Henry Kiel, signed by the president and treasurer of the Union Mill Co., indorsed by Filbrun & Ivers.............■.................... 4,689 75

$ 4,833 90

Total resources.......................$20,073 13.”

Objections and exceptions thereto were filed by plaintiff, which were overruled by the court, and judgment based on said report was given for defendant in the sum of $1,149.20, from which plaintiff has appealed.

In • the said report of the referee, it will be perceived defendant, Ivers, is given credit for $4,689.75, the full amount of principal and interest then due on the Kiel note, and the principal exception to the report and judgment entered thereon, is in respect to this [392]*392credit. As to this note the facts seem to be about as follows : Said firm of Filbrun & Ivers was, with other parties, interested in the Union Mill Company, a company engaged in the manufacture and sale of flour. Said Filbrun, it seems, was the president, and said Ivers secretary, of said mill company. In January, 1880, said mill company, by its said president and secretary, executed the following note, which is the one referred to in the cause:

. “$4,000.00. Cape Girardeau, Mo., Jan. 9, 1880

“ Six months after date, we promise to pay to the order of Henry Kiel,-four thousand dollars for value received, negotiable and payable without defalcation or discount, with interest from date at the rate of ten per ■cent, per annum.

‘ [Signed.] John H. Filbrun,

“Pres. Mo. Union Mill Co.

‘ £ John Ivers, Secretary.5 ’

Said note was endorsed by the said firm of Filbrun & Ivers, and, after the dissolution of the partnership, and before- this suit was brought, said Ivers purchased said note from Meystedt, the owner and holdeiTthereof, and, as we have said, the referee, in his report, gives •said Ivers a credit therefor, in the amount of the face value and the accrued interest.

The relations of plaintiff and defendant being that •of partners, their rights and duties, as between themselves, are to be governed by the rules applicable to trustees and agents, and the trust relation, which exists between them, is not terminated with the dissolution, but continues until a final adjustment and settlement of the partnership affairs is had. Story on Part. [5 Ed.] secs. 174, 848; Pomeroy v. Benton, 57 Mo. 531.

Application of these rules and principles would entitle defendant, Ivers, to a credit only in the amount actually paid by him for the said note. In this behalf, [393]*393the testimony of Ivers was, in substance, that he paid Meystedt, the holder and owner of the note, two hundred and fifty dollars in cash, and certain commissions on sales of meat which he made for Meystedt, between the months of October, 1880, and April, 1881. The usual charge for such commission, as he testifies, was two and one-half per cent, for buying, and the same for selling. He testified that he bought more than ten thousand dollars’ worth of meats for Meystedt, but would not testify that the amount so purchased was as much as fifteen thousand dollars. So that, in any event, upon the theory of his testimony, allowing him five per cent, on the largest amount, fifteen thousand dollars, his commissions would amount to seven hundred and fifty dollars, and the two hundred and fifty dollars paid in cash would make the note cost him, and the sum actually paid therefor, not to exceed one thousand dollars. So that taking this as the testimony of Ivers, in this behalf, and accepting the same as correct, the liability of the. firm to Ivers, on account of said note, should have been taken as of the amount so paid, in fact, instead of the face value of the note and accrued interest. But, taking the testimony of Ivers, himself, in its entirety, it is not at all clear that there was, even according to him, any consideration for the Kiel note, beyond the two hundred and fifty dollar cash payment. He also testified that he had no contract or bargain with Meystedt as to buying or selling the meat; that, during the time he was so engaged, Meystedt paid him no commissions, and that nothing was ever said, by either of them, in that behalf; and, when asked what conversation passed between him and Meystedt at the time he paid the money for the note, he answered that the purport was, that if he would give Meystedt two hundred and fifty dollars, Meystedt would call everything straight between them, and that nothing: was said about commissions. .

[394]*394On the other hand, Meystedt testified that defendant? Ivers, paid him two hundred and fifty dollars, in cash, for the note, and paid nothing else. He further says that Ivers bought the meat from him, and paid him for it before it was shipped, and that Ivers sold the same for himself, and not for Meystedt. We should also observe that something is said in his evidence about certain accounts against Mm being settled on the books. These accounts were due the firm of Filbrun & Ivers, and said mill company, and cut no figure in determining what the note cost Ivers, for the reason that his interest therein was no greater than Filbrun’s.

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92 Mo. 388, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/filbrun-v-ivers-mo-1887.