Flannery v. Flannery

51 N.E.2d 349, 320 Ill. App. 421, 1943 Ill. App. LEXIS 633
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 30, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 51 N.E.2d 349 (Flannery v. Flannery) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Flannery v. Flannery, 51 N.E.2d 349, 320 Ill. App. 421, 1943 Ill. App. LEXIS 633 (Ill. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Stone

delivered the opinion of the court.

Mary Flannery, Abbott Flannery, Vincent Flannery, Viola A. Flannery, administratrix of the estate of Charles Flannery, deceased, and Jerome Flannery, appellants who will hereinafter he designated as plaintiffs filed suit in equity against James P. Flannery, appellee, who will be hereinafter designated as defendant, for a determination of the interest of the parties in the copartnership of P. Flannery and Son, and for a determination of the interest of the parties in P. Flannery and Sons, Inc., an Illinois corporation and for dissolution of the partnership. It was among the parties agreed that this cause should proceed to a final adjudication as to the respective rights and interests of the parties in and to the partnership and the corporate capital and profits and that thereafter an accounting should be had and taken by the court. The question of the accounting is, therefore, not involved in this appeal.

The suit was originally instituted by Mary Flannery, and was directed against the rest of the parties litigant herein. Later, after notice to defendant James P. Flannery, by their petition, Vincent Flannery, Charles Flannery, Jerome Flannery and Abbott Flannery, asked to join as parties plaintiff, praying tbe same relief as the original plaintiff, Mary Flannery. During tbe pendency of tbe suit, Charles Flannery died, and Viola A. Flannery, bis widow, as administratrix of bis estate was substituted in bis stead.

The record discloses that tbe partnership was engaged in tbe handling and selling of building materials in tbe City of East St. Louis, Illinois. It bad its rather nebulous beginnings, according to plaintiffs’ theory, when it was founded by Patrick Flannery, father of tbe parties litigant, who continued to own tbe business up to tbe time of bis death in 1931; they claim that for 30 years prior to bis death, be permitted tbe business to be conducted under tbe name of “P. Flannery and Son” as a trade name without reference to any particular son, and upon bis death, tbe business became tbe property of bis wife, tbe mother of plaintiffs and defendant, by tbe terms of a will, which bequeathed all of bis personal property to tbe widow, but which will was never filed for probate; that upon tbe death of said mother, intestate, a one-sixth interest in tbe business vested in plaintiffs and defendant. This theory of ownership in tbe father and mother seems to be predicated upon some rather vague conversations between them, both of whom are now deceased, and testified to by various plaintiffs.

Defendant claims that bis father loaned him $1,200, in 1899 with which be purchased tbe remnants of tbe Contractor’s Material Company, that be, defendant, was a minor at tbe time, and tbe name of Patrick Flannery and Son was used to obtain credit, and that this loan was repaid to bis father, who tbe evidence seems to indicate, was not active in the business, since 1918.

In tbe latter part of 1917 or early in 1918 a copartnership was created by defendant, James P. Flannery and bis brother, William J. Flannery, under tbe firm name and style of “P. Flannery and Son,” each, owning an equal one-half interest therein. This partnership continued until the death of William J. Flannery on September 7, 1922, at which time by operation of law, it was dissolved.

Regardless of the activities of P. Flannery in the organization of the business and the interest he may have had therein, by written agreement dated April 1, 1918, and by deed of conveyance dated April 19, 1918, he transferred all or any interest he may have had to J ames P. Flannery and William J. Flannery.

Upon the death of William J. Flannery, P. Flannery purchased for the nest of kin of William J. Flannery, from Hazel Moody Flannery, the widow of William J. Flannery, in consideration of the sum of $10,000 the interest of William J. Flannery, as evidenced by an agreement dated October 7, 1922, and by quitclaim deed dated October 7, 1922, she conveyed certain real estate to Patrick Flannery, and Mary Flannery, his wife, James P. Flannery, Abbott Flannery, Vincent Flannery, Mary Flannery, Jerome Flannery and Charles Flannery.

Thereafter, on the 25th day of April, 1929, Patrick Flannery and Mary Flannery, his wife, conveyed by warranty deed, “all of the right, title and interest of the grantors,” in the real estate described in defendant’s eshibits 6 and 14, to James P. Flannery, Abbott Flannery, Vincent Flannery, Mary Flannery, Charles Flannery and Jerome Flannery. It is conceded that all interest in both the real estate and personal property received from Hazel Moody Flannery passed to, and became therein property in equal shares of James P. Flannery, Abbott Flannery, Vincent Flannery, Mary Flannery, Charles Flannery and Jerome Flannery.

Thereupon, as admitted by the pleading herein, a new partnership was created, composed of James P. Flannery, Mary Flannery, Jerome Flannery, Abbott Flannery and Charles Flannery, and until the time of incorporation continued to operate as a copartnership under the firm name of P. Flannery and Son.

At the time of the death of William J. Flannery, on September 7, 1922, the copartnership assets, consisting of real and personal property, were owned equally, share and share alike, by James P. Flannery and William J. Flannery, and the record discloses no act on the part of James P. Flannery divesting himself of his undivided one-half interest as copartner of William J. Flannery. Therefore, upon the dissolution of the copartnership of James P. Flannery and William J. Flannery, he was entitled to an accounting for one-half interest therein. The heirs and next of kin, by virtue of the agreement and conveyance of Hazel Moody Flannery, could acquire no greater interest than that possessed by William J. Flannery, and it therefore follows that Patrick Flannery and Mary Flannery, his wife, could acquire no greater interest than that possessed by William J. Flannery, and that Patrick Flannery and Mary Flannery, his wife, could convey no more than the one-eighth interest which each held, and vesting each of the five plaintiffs and defendant with a one-sixth interest in and to the interest owned by William J. Flannery, now deceased. Thus, "the interest contributed by each plaintiff to the copartnership is one twelfth and by the defendant seven twelfths and it must necessarily follow that the defendant, James P. Flannery is the owner of seven twelfths of the copartnership assets and the plaintiffs, Abbott Flannery, (Vincent Flannery, Mary Flannery, Jerome Flannery, and Viola A. Flannery, as administratrix of the estate of Charles Flannery, are each the owners of one twelfth of the copartnership assets.

On February 6, 1930, the material business, which had previously been conducted as a partnership, was incorporated as an Illinois corporation, under the name of “P. Flannery and Sons, Inc.,” 350 shares being issued to defendant, James P. Flannery and 50 shares each to the plaintiffs, the stock having been issued in the same proportions as the interest of the respective parties in the copartnership. Each shareholder, with the exception of plaintiff, Mary Flannery, upon being notified, signed for and received his stock, and Mary Flannery upon being notified, stated that at some future time she would call for her stock, and on several occasions signed the corporation minute book.

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Bluebook (online)
51 N.E.2d 349, 320 Ill. App. 421, 1943 Ill. App. LEXIS 633, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flannery-v-flannery-illappct-1943.