Goepper v. Kinsinger

39 Ohio St. 429, 39 Ohio St. (N.S.) 429
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 6, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 39 Ohio St. 429 (Goepper v. Kinsinger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Goepper v. Kinsinger, 39 Ohio St. 429, 39 Ohio St. (N.S.) 429 (Ohio 1883).

Opinion

Doyle, J.

This action was brought into this court by petition in error before the passage of the act of April 18, 1883, and the question whether the decree of the district court is so manifestly unsupported by the evidence as to require its reversal, is properly before us.

We cannot undertake, in this opinion, to recite such evidence in detail. We are satisfied with the finding of the district court that Blotter, Sr., was a partner in the firm of Blotter’s Sons, although his name does not appear in the partnership agreement or in the firm name, and hence will pass over the testimony offered upon that issue.

We do not understand, however, that the determination of that question has very much importance in supporting the decree, that the buildings on the real estate were built by the firm, or belonged to the firm. It is quite consistent with the fact of such partnership that the use of the property was contributed by Blotter, Sr., as his contribution to the capital of the partnership, or, in view of the total wrant of capital by the sons, that the firm were tenants of the property. Therefore, to sustain the judgment of the district court there must be evidence quite independent of the partnership itself, that Blotter, Sr., contributed the property to the firm as partnership capital, or that the firm, out of its partnership moneys, paid for the same.

The decree gives the entire improvements to the assignee of the firm, leaving only the naked laud to the individual assignee of Blotter, Sr. We are utterly unable to find any evidence in the record to justify such a decree. That the firm, after the buisness was started, paid some of the bills incurred in completing the buildings, and some of the additions thereto, *437 may be true ; but that is entirely consistent with the continued ownership of the father, as it is quite evident that much more than was thus paid was advanced in money to the firm during the period of such payments, by the father, in some instances, undoubtedly, for the very purpose of making such payments. Prior to the formation of this partnership, the father purchased .this real estate and commenced the erection of these buildings; they were substantially completed in the fall of 1868, the interior arrangement being all that remained to be done. When the firm actually commenced business in January, 1869, the buildings were substantially ready for the work of brewing. Neither of the sons contributed a dollar up to that time, and neither of them ever had anything to contribute except what was earned by the firm after business commenced. How much that was, it is not difficult to estimate, inasmuch as the firm failed in 1877, with $85,000 of the moneys advanced by Blotter, Sr., in the building of the brewery and other advances of money from his individual means, and moneys borrowed upon the strength of his individual security, unpaid, for which, if it were true that this property was the firm’s, he was either a creditor, or which he was entitled, after the firm debts were paid, to draw out of the concern before his partners could receive any part of the capital .stock; and independently of such amount the firm was wholly insolvent.

We do not doubt that the father built the. brewery, and established the business to give his sons a means of accumulating a competency, as well as to secure himself a certain income therefrom; but that he intended either to give them this property, or to contribute it as capital t.o the firm, which would be the same thing in effect; we are unable to find from anything appearing in the evidence.

There is no paper writing containing any agreement so to do. No witness speaks of any agreement of the kind as being made in terms,, and we are unable to find any facts, proved in the case, from which such agreement is fairly to be implied.

It is admitted, and it is a matter about which there is no conflict in t.he testimony, that the building itself was substantially completed (over $37,000 having been expended thereon), *438 before the partnership was formed, and that the two sons were wholly without capital. How, then, could this property become the property of the partnership? By gift from the father to the sons of which there is no evidence whatever. By contribution thereof by the father to the capital of the firm, which must be inferred, if found to be the fact, from the conduct of the parties, for there is no direct evidence thereof; or by purchase from the father, by the firm, which is not claimed, and under the evidence cannot be claimed.

There is nothing in the evidence to show, and we do not understand it to be claimed in argument, that there was any reputed joint ownership of this property, which misled creditors. While it is true the property was in the occupation of the firm, that fact alone will not, as between the partners themselves, or between the partners and creditors, convert the individual real property of one partner into joint property of the partnership. There must be something, which amounts to a representation that it is joint property, or conduct justifying the creditor to treat it as such.

The only theory upon which the decree of the district court can be sustained, if at all, is that this property was contributed as capital to-the firm by the father; and although the district court does not so find, yet, as the-evidence is all before us, if it justified that conclusion, a decree properly based thereon would not be disturbed, although a different reason was given for it by the court rendering such decree.

In attempting to imply a contract or agreement, to contribute this property as firm capital from the circumstances, including statements and conduct, it must be borne in mind that it is the acts of the owner which are to be looked to, mainly, for that purpose. The legal title to the land was in Klotter, Sr. He was the admitted owner thereof in fee simple. Prima facie, at least, the improvements of a permanent character erected thereon are included in such ownership. No doubt, if this land was purchased during the existence of the firm, and the buildings erected thereon by firm assets, or were the contributive share of one partner to the firm assets, to be used as partnership property, the fact that the title was taken or held *439 in tbe name of one partner, would not, in equity, make it the individual property of such partner. But when this property was bought, and the greater part of these permanent improvements erected, there was no partnership; there were no partnership assets ; and there was at that time no agreement that the property should ever be subject even to the use of any partnership. The money used in the purchase and erection was the individual money of Blotter, Sr.

Now at the date of the assignment in January, 1877, he treated it as his property. His assignment and that of the firm wrere simultaneously made, and to the same assignee. He included this property in his individual assignment by accurate description. He executed such assignment with the formalities of a conveyance of real estate, while the assignment of the partners was not so executed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
39 Ohio St. 429, 39 Ohio St. (N.S.) 429, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goepper-v-kinsinger-ohio-1883.