Green v. Kubik

239 N.W. 589, 213 Iowa 763
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 17, 1931
DocketNo. 41169.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 239 N.W. 589 (Green v. Kubik) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Green v. Kubik, 239 N.W. 589, 213 Iowa 763 (iowa 1931).

Opinion

Kindig, J.

Annie M. Green owns a life estate in 280 acres *764 of land in Carroll County. Before tlie commencement of this action, Robert Green, the plaintiff-appellant, was duly appointed trustee for said property. On November 12, 1929, the appellant, as such trustee, entered into a written contract with the defendant-appellee, Fred Rubik, wherein the land above named was leased by the former to the latter. Under the lease contract, appellee agreed to furnish all labor, horses, and machinery for the operation of the farm. The live stock was to be owned jointly by the appellant and appellee. Each party was to share equally in the net proceeds from the venture after the payment of operating expenses, exclusive of labor, horses, and machinery.

Appellee, under the lease took possession of the above-named land March 1, 1930. According to the contract, the term of the lease expired March 1, 1933. When the agreement was signed, both appellant and appellee were residents of Tama County. Appellant then lived in the city of Tama, while appellee resided on a farm near by. At that time appellee owned cattle, sheep, hogs, horses, and machinery. For the purposes of the lease, appellant bought a one-half interest in appellee’s cattle, sheep, and hogs. Sometime near March 1, 1930, appellee moved the aforesaid property from Tama to appellant’s 280-acre farm near Manning.

Soon after appellee reached the farm, appellant appeared, and stayed at the place from time to time during the spring and early summer of 1930. In fact, the work on the farm for that period appears -to have been directed very largely by appellant. Early in the farming operations, appellant seemed to feel that his venture with appellee might not be profitable, and he attempted to change tl$ contract from the share-rent basis to one of a cash consideration. That proposition was refused by appellee. This refusal by appellee irritated the appellant, and he is said to have threatened revenge.

The lease provided that appellee was to make certain repairs on the premises. Immediately appellant insisted that fencing be done; so he, together with appellee and the hired men, spent considerable time in building these fences. Apparently appellee and his men worked from two to three weeks during the spring season in erecting the fences. Some fencing still remained to be done when appellee commenced plowing for and planting corn. From time to time appellant continued to insist that the fencing *765 be completed. On each occasion appellee said he would do the work as soon as the immediate farm duties were performed. During the late summer appellee offered to complete the fences, and appellant then said he would have nothing further to do with the proposition. It seems that appellant was quite arbitrary and unreasonable in many of his demands. Nothing apparently satisfied him. He repeatedly quarreled with the hired men, and caused two of them to leave appellee. Every possible attempt seems to have been made by appellee to comply with appellant’s requests on the farm. The record indicates that appellee exorcised great patience with appellant at all times.

However, on August 5, 1930, appellant commenced this action to cancel the lease and terminate the relationship. Generally speaking, four reasons are given by appellant why he is entitled to this relief. These reasons are: First, that the relationship between the parties became so strained as to render the continuance of the joint adventure impractical and injurious to both parties, thus making a dissolution of the joint adventure and a cancellation of the contract necessary and advisable; second, that the appellee had violated the contract to the extent that a court of equity is warranted in canceling the same; third, that the appellee failed to exercise due care in the conduct of the co-adventure business. To put the thought differently, appellant here asserts that the appellee grossly mismanaged the co-adventure property, in that he neglected the live stock and cultivated the land in a very unworkmanlike manner; and fourth, that it is apparent that the venture is nonproductive, and being operated at such a loss that the same should be terminated.

Appellant proceeds on the theory that the foregoing relationship between him and appellee is that of a joint adventure. As authority for that proposition he cites Goss v. Lanin, 170 Iowa 57; Dike v. Martin, 204 Pac. 1106 (Okla.); Botsford v. Van Riper, 110 Pac. 705 (Nev.); Walker v. Bruce, 97 Pac. 250 (Colo.). See also Bond v. O’Donnell, 205 Iowa 902. Assuming that the relationship is such, appellant then proceeds further in his argument by contending that it may be terminated on the same basis that a partnership can be dissolved. Upon this proposition he cites Senneff v. Kelleher, 155 Iowa 82; Boiler & Welding Co. v. Minnetonka Lumber Company, 229 Pac. (Okla.) 1045; Irvine v. Campbell, 141 N. W. (Minn.) 108; Keiswetter *766 v. Rubenstein, 209 N. W. (Mich.) 154; Meinhard v. Salmon, 164 N. E. (N. Y.) 545.

For the purposes of this case, we assume, without deciding, that such is the law. We expressly refrain from holding that the relationship between appellant and appellee was that of a joint adventure or partnership. Nevertheless, even on that basis, appellant is not entitled to a cancellation of the contract under the facts and circumstances revealed in the present record.

I. It is first contended by appellant, as before indicated, that the relationship between the parties became so strained as to render the continuance of the joint adventure impractical and injurious to both parties, thus making a dissolution of the same necessary and advisable.

Similar questions have confronted courts in this and other jurisdictions. In a general way, it can be said that a partnership or joint adventure for a fixed term may be dissolved before the time stipulated when the parties become so quarrelsome and incompatible as to render the continuance of the relationship impractical and injurious. Blake v. Dorgan, 1 G. Greene (Iowa) 537; Levi v. Karrick, 8 Iowa 150; 47 Corpus Juris 1120, Sec. 787; Fooks v. Williams, 87 Atl. (Md.) 692; Whalen v. Stephens, 61 N. E. (Ill.) 921. But before such relief can be granted, the preliminary facts and circumstances must exist. As said in Levi v. Karrick, supra (8 Iowa 150), on page 154:

“A partnership will not be dissolved for trifling faults and misbehavior of one of the partners which do not go to the substance of the contract * #

See also 47 Corpus Juris 1119, Sec. 784; 20 Ruling Case Law 958, Sec. 182.

Moreover, in order to warrant a dissolution in the case at bar, both parties must enter into the quarreling and bickering, etc. Upon what theory the courts reach that conclusion is not now material, because it is certain that the quarreling and bickering must be joined in by both parties to warrant a dissolution of the partnership, regardless of the theory on which such bickering and quarreling may, under proper circumstances, entitle either party to such dissolution. Some authorities, however, reach the conclusion that the bickering and quarreling must be joined in by both parties before the contract of partnership can *767

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Bluebook (online)
239 N.W. 589, 213 Iowa 763, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/green-v-kubik-iowa-1931.