Graham v. Street

166 P.2d 524, 109 Utah 460, 1946 Utah LEXIS 163
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1946
DocketNo. 6863.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 166 P.2d 524 (Graham v. Street) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Graham v. Street, 166 P.2d 524, 109 Utah 460, 1946 Utah LEXIS 163 (Utah 1946).

Opinion

WOLFE, Justice.

Appeal from an interlocutory decree and the findings in support of it, holding that a partnership had been formed between plaintiff Graham and defendant Street on August 6, 1943 (in the decree August 6, 1945, but obviously a clerical error) and that Street and Siegel through connivance diverted from plaintiff the use of partnership property and partnership earnings, and ordering an accounting. We entertained the appeal under authority of Attorney General of Utah v. Pomeroy, 93 Utah 426, 73 P. 2d 1277, 114 A. L. R. 726. The original complaint was only against defendant Street. It alleged a parol contract of partnership for the purpose of acquiring and operating a combination caterpillar tractor, bulldozer and road grader in excavation work and for dividing the profits equally between the parties; that defendant Street wrongully collected money belonging to the partnership and applied the same to other than partnership purposes and withheld from plaintiff all moneys earned. It further alleged defendant impeded and injured the business of said partnership and

“conspired with other parties to take possession of, and to misappro priate the funds belonging to said partnership, and to exclude this plaintiff from any management or control of said partnership business” (italics added),

contrary to the agreement heretofore entered into. On April 14, 1945, an amended complaint with Max Siegel joined as a defendant was tendered, and on April 17, 1945, on the morning of the trial, the amended complaint, over objection of Street and Siegel, was permitted to be filed and an order *465 made joining Siegel as a party defendant. Appellants assign the permission to file the amendment and the joinder of Siegel as errors.

In the amended complaint averments are in considerable more detail than in the original complaint. The event leading up to the dealings with Siegel are set out and the terms of the verbal contract for the joint venture between Graham and Street, which it is claimed re-fleet the partnership, are enumerated. There then follows allegations of Street’s breach of the partnership agreement in failing to deposit partnership moneys in the bank as agreed and in applying said moneys to non-partnership purposes. Thus far the amended complaint sets up no new cause of action against Street but only an elaboration of the transactions which reflect the partnership set out in the original complaint. The amended complaint then proceeds to recite in some detail the transactions which took place with Siegel by which it is alleged that the latter first came into the transaction ostensibly as a lender taking title in himself for security and afterwards repudiated that status and insisted that he was the legal owner of the equipment purchased, whereas he was in fact actually a lender and mortgagee; that later when Siegel repudiated the status of lender and suggested a partnership between Graham, Street and himself in which he, Siegel, would receive back the $4500 which he advanced for the tractor out of the two-thirds of the net earnings accruing to Graham and Street, retaining one-third of the earnings during the time it took to pay off the $4500.00 and interest, each party to end with an ownership of a one-third interest in the equipment and each thereafter to divide the earnings, a third to each; that upon refusal of plaintiff to enter into such arrangement, Siegel notified plaintiff that he was the sole owner of said equipment and denied the existence of a note and mortgage for $4500' claimed by plaintiff to have been executed in his favor at a previous occasion. These matters are new to the amended complaint. While the original complaint contained a vague reference to a conspiracy be *466 tween Street and third parties as shown by the above italicized portion, the new matter we think is more than a mere elaboration of this vague charge of conspiracy because it definitely names Siegel as the outside conspiring party and guiding genius of Street in his alleged departure from the conduct expected from one related to another in trust and confidence. The gravamen of the offense is shifted from one in the original complaint of a recalcitrant partner who will not account and who, with the assistance of others, uses partnership property for other than partnership use, to one where the material part of the offense is the defrauding of Graham by the connivance of Street and Siegel in which the partnership of Graham and Street is a preliminary issue. More anent this later. These amendments are well within the principle laid down in the case of Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co. v. Clegg, 103 Utah 414, 135 P. 2d 919, 925. As noted by Justice Wade in his concurring opinion in that case, our statute, Utah Code 1943, 104-14-4, does not limit the amendments to an area within the cause of action originally pleaded but grants the court power to allow amendments “in the furtherance of justice.” While some limit must be placed on amendments allowed, the limits are those set out in Hartford Accident and Indemnity Co. v. Clegg, supra. It was there held that where the new allegations do not introduce matters which interject an entirely new, distinct and unrelated legal obligation but enlarge on the facts so as to present a series of transactions all germane and forming a connected whole reflecting the manner in which the plaintiff suffered injury, the bounds of an amendment are determined by what

“can [be] conveniently and efficiently [handled] as a single unit * * * without injury to substantive rights.”

And this is largely in the discretion of the trial court. Here all the added matter was germane to the original matters alleged. And if the matters between the plaintiff on the one hand and Street and Siegel on the other are *467 to be adjudicated in this suit by making Siegel a party, the amendments were quite material, if not necessary. The action of the court in permitting the amendments must be considered in connection with its action in ordering Siegel in as a defendant. As the two matters are related we shall therefore pass on to the second error assigned, to wit: the joining of Siegel as a defendant.

Sec. 104-3-25, U. C. A. 1943 provides as far as is here material as follows:

“The court may determine any controversy between the parties before it when it can be done without prejudice to the rights of others, or by saving their rights; but when a complete determination of the controversy cannot be had without the presence of other parties, the court must then order them to be brought in.' * * *”

We think the amended complaint, when the history of the transactions somewhat narratively stated is considered, sets forth an action in equity, the very core of which is the fraudulent action of the defendants Street and Siegel in conniving to undo a partnership between Graham and Street and to keep from Graham the property and fruits of his alleged partnership with Street. The allegations of plaintiff’s partnership with Street are necessary and preliminary to arrive at the part that Siegel and Street played in disrupting the relationship of Graham and Street.

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Related

Prentiss v. Sheffel
513 P.2d 949 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 1973)
Graham v. Street
270 P.2d 456 (Utah Supreme Court, 1954)
Street v. Fourth Judicial Dist. Court, Utah Co.
191 P.2d 153 (Utah Supreme Court, 1948)

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Bluebook (online)
166 P.2d 524, 109 Utah 460, 1946 Utah LEXIS 163, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graham-v-street-utah-1946.