Fooks v. Williams

87 A. 692, 120 Md. 436, 1913 Md. LEXIS 110
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 10, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 87 A. 692 (Fooks v. Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fooks v. Williams, 87 A. 692, 120 Md. 436, 1913 Md. LEXIS 110 (Md. 1913).

Opinion

Stockbridge, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In November, 1909, the plaintiff and defendant entered into a verbal agreement of partnership for the purchase, laying out, developing and gelling of real estate in or near to the town of Salisbury. No time limit was agreed upon for the duration of the'partnership and it was thus a partnership at will. In pursuance of the agreement so entered into certain tracts of land were purchased as shown by four deeds, filed as exhibits with the bill of complaint, in which the conveyances were made to the parties to this proceeding as tenants in common, or to them, their heirs and assigns, without more particular designation. A surveyor was employed to lay out the land into lots for the purposes of sale, and two lots were in fact sold. On November 4th, 1910, the plaintiff filed a bill in the Circuit Court for Wicomico County, in which, after alleging the formation of the partnership, the purchase of the property for the purposes for which the partnership was formed, further alleged “that serious and irreconcilable differences and disagreements” had arisen between the parties, and that the plaintiff was desirous of dissolving the partnership. The bill further alleged that the defendant would not agree to sell the property at a fair and reasonable profit, and that after the defendant had agreed to a sale, he had refused to consummate the same, and that the plaintiff believed that the defendant had attempted to make a profit from the plaintiff by means of a pretended purchaser. The bill prayed for the appointment of a receiver to take charge of the partnership assets, to preserve and dispose of them under the direction of the Court; for an in- *439 j unction against the defendant from selling or disposing of or withholding from the receiver any of the partnership property ; that the partnership might he dissolved, an accounting had between the partners; that the effects and property of the partnership might be sold and applied to the payment of its debts and liabilities, and the residue distributed between the parties.

The defendant appeared'and answered, admitting the partnership, the purchase of property, hut denying the other material allegations of the bill. The case then proceeded to testimony and a large amount was taken, the bulk of which throws but little light upon the real issues of the case.

At the conclusion of the evidence, and before the case was heard by the Oourt, the plaintiff applied for leave to amend his original bill, and permission having been granted filed a new and amended bill of complaint.

The defendants moved to dismiss the petition of the plaintiff for leave thus to amend the original bill, but the motion was denied, and a demurrer of Edith Williams, one of the defendants named in the amended bill, to the amended bill was overruled. The case having been argued and submitted to the Oourt, the bill was dismissed and this appeal taken.

The amended bill differed from the original bill in the following respects: It made the wife of Affria Fooks a party plaintiff, and the wife of Elmer 0. Williams a party defendant; it is alleged that Fooks and Williams were concurrent owners of the property, “that is to say tenants in common, and that the land is not susceptible of partition without material loss and injury to the parties entitled, and that it would he necessary that the real esate be sold and the proceeds divided between the parties according to their several interests.”

The original bill was a bill for the dissolution of a parir ' nership, the settlement of accounts as between the partners and the disposition of the partnership property; the amended bill was a bill by one tenant in common against his co-tenant *440 for the sale of property insusceptible of division in kind, a radically different form of proceeding. While the statute in this State gives great liberty of amendment, as was said by the late Judge McSherry, in Smith v. Hooper, 95 Md. 36, “a plaintiff is not at liberty to abandon the entire case made by his bill and to make a new and different case by way o* amendment,” and the same principle is laid down in Miller's Equity, sec. 186; Bannon v. Comegys, 69 Md. 411; Benscotter v. Green, 60 Md. 321. It therefore follows that the demurrer of Mrs. Williams' to - the amended bill should have been sustained, and that the motion of the defendants to dismiss the plaintiff’s petition to amend his original bill should have been granted inasmuch as that petition set forth in terms the character of the amendment proposed to be made, and the radical difference in the nature of the proposed amended bill from the original bill was apparent on the face of the petition.

The allegations of the original bill were weak and hardly sufficient for the granting of relief such as that prayed. A bill of this character should not merelv allege irreconcilable differences between the partners, but should also allege facts sufficient in their character to make it apparent to the Court, that, if supported by proof, the differences were irreconcilable, and of such a nature as terminated or seriously imperiled any further continuance of the relation. If we look for such facts in this case, there are but two that can be said to be alleged; namely, that Williams would not agree with the plaintiff to- sell the property at a fair and reasonable profit; but what might be a fair and reasonable profit in a land speculation was a matter of opinion upon which two persons might honestly differ in the exercise of the utmost good faith upon each side, and a mere error of judgment is never a ground for the dissolution of a partnership. 30 Gyc. 651-58. The second fact alleged was, that Williams after having agreed to sell declined to consummate the sale when the time for the execution of the deed arrived, and yet this, *441 so far as any allegation in the bill is concerned, mig'ht have been a perfectly proper and just act upon his part; as for example, if the deed had contained special covenants not embraced in the terms of the agreement for sale. If the original bill had been demurred to for its lack of definiteness, or even as being prematurely filed, such a demurrer could properly have been sustained. The partnership had been entered into according to the undisputed testimony, and the plats filed, for the acquisition, development in laying out streets and dividing into town building lots land, heretofore used as faiming land; operations of that character for their successful conduct and conclusion inevitably require the lapse of some considerable period of time, and the dissolution of a partnership by a decree of Court may be refused when circumstances of a particular case render such dissolution improper, as where a large operation has been begun which can not be arrested without serious loss. 30 Gyc. 656, and cases there cited. Mr. Williams, however, did not demur to the original bill; he saw fit to answer, thereby waiving any objection which he might have properly taken to the form of the original bill, and the case in due course reached the taking of testimony, and a large volume of evidence was offered upon either side.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
87 A. 692, 120 Md. 436, 1913 Md. LEXIS 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fooks-v-williams-md-1913.