Gundry v. Scrimger

209 N.W. 71, 235 Mich. 62, 1926 Mich. LEXIS 649
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 7, 1926
DocketDocket No. 97.
StatusPublished

This text of 209 N.W. 71 (Gundry v. Scrimger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gundry v. Scrimger, 209 N.W. 71, 235 Mich. 62, 1926 Mich. LEXIS 649 (Mich. 1926).

Opinion

Steere, J.

Plaintiff filed this bill of complaint in the circuit court of Genesee county, in chancery, alleging a partnership between himself and defendant in a retail gasoline and service station in the city of Flint, located at 1610 Detroit street, praying for an accounting and dissolution .of said partnership. Defendant answered admitting the existence of said partnership and further answering by way of cross-bill alleged a partnership existed between them also in a wholesale gasoline and oil business conducted in the city of Flint under the name of the Genesee Oil Company, located near the Pere Marquette tracks on Second street, west, in the city of Flint, in which he originally invested $1,500, praying for an accounting and dissolution of that partnership also. Plaintiff answered said cross-bill denying any partnership existed between them in the Genesee Oil Company and alleged that whatever money defendant had furnished for it was but borrowed. After the parties rested at the close of the hearing the; court announced to counsel his conclusion that a partnership existed between the parties in both companies and stated he would hold that the partnership in the service station on Detroit street, having proved unprofitable, should be dissolved, but expressed an opinion that the Genesee Oil Company, being an established, profitable business, should be maintained, and suggested that some arrangement between the parties should be made to that end, as an absolute decree by the court of dissolution and accounting might tend to • work financial injury to one or both the parties. The following colloquy ■between court and counsel concluded submission of the case:

“The Court: It is the duty of the Genesee Oil Com *64 pany to keep the station running. If these people can arrange this matter between themselves, I would be glad to have them.
“Mr. S— (Attorney for plaintiff) : What about the Genesee Oil Company? Aren’t we going to dispose of that?
“The Court: You want to dispose of that?
“Mr. S — : What about the interest of Mr. Scrimger?
“The Court: He can retain his interest.
“Mr. S — : The cross-bill asks for dissolution.
“The Court: I don’t think I will dissolve the concern. The Genesee Oil Company is a going concern, making money. The other concern is not making money. If Mr. S — , Mr. C— and Mr. W— get together they can get more out of it. I would suggest that Mr. Scrimger take his out of the concern.
“Mr. S — : Aren’t we entitled to a dissolution when we filed a bill?
“Mr. C— (Attorney for defendant) : I think in view of the findings of the court we can agree to buy or sell.
“The Court: I think you ought to.
“Mr. C — : There is a thing the court has not mentioned. There has been a loss on the gasoline station, a loss of something over $2,000; that loss should be borne by each.
“The Court.: Yes. I think if the attorneys and parties get together they can make more than by fighting.”

The case having been thus submitted, nothing further appears of record until about a month later, when, on February 27, 1925, a decree was signed and filed by the court, finding a partnership existed between the parties in the Detroit street gasoline service station which must be dissolved, as alleged, and admitted in their pleadings, and that a partnership also existed between them in the Genesee Oil Company, which likewise must be dissolved; that in the accounting between the parties, for which testimony was taken on the hearing, plaintiff should take over the assets and business of both partnerships and pay defendant *65 for his found one-eleventh interest therein $5,540.30, payable in installments as follows: $1,000 on filing the decree and $500 on the 27th of each succeeding month until the amount in full, with seven per cent, interest on deferred payments, was paid, with costs to' defendant to be taxed, including $154.24, fees of an expert witness.

The record is silent as to what, if anything, took place between the parties or their counsel in pursuance of the court’s suggestions, or by whom this decree was drawn or what took place when it was settled. Counsel who represented plaintiff in the court below and counsel in this appeal are not the same. Counsel for defendant claims it may be assumed, “that this decree was agreed upon by the parties and their attorneys,” and that it is also safe to assume “plaintiff afterwards became dissatisfied and employed other counsel and an appeal was taken.” No direct reply is made to that claim, and no concession or comment appears in the brief of plaintiff’s counsel in this appeal as to the circumstances of signing and filing the decree. The points argued are for its modification. They are that the court erred in finding defendant’s interest in the Genesee Oil Company was a one-eleventh interest; that the court erred in crediting defendant with $949.21, being one-quarter of a cent per gallon allowed him personally on all gasoline bought by him from the Genesee Oil Company for the Detroit street service station, of which he had charge, claiming the allowance should be to the partnership and not to him personally; and the court erred in not finding, as the evidence showed, that certain payments made at his request to defendant by plaintiff, late in 1922, as manager of the Genesee Oil Company, terminated whatever interest defendant had in that company.

The parties to this suit are brothers-in-law. Both had experience in the gasoline selling and service *66 station business before they entered into any partnership relations, defendant mostly as an employee, and plaintiff as a promoter and dealer.

Plaintiff had made .several apparently unprofitable ventures in that line, but finally, in the spring of 1922, he promoted a wholesale and retail business on West Second street in Flint, dealing in gasoline, kerosene, cylinder and fuel oil and other allied commodities, which proved profitable. He tells a fluctuating story as to events and his financial circumstances at that time. He testified that he “furnished the capital for that business,” and later in telling how he raised the funds to start it, said:

“At that time I did not have a cent, no, sir. I had all my money in the Western Oil & Gas Company. I had to borrow practically every dollar that went into that business. It was when I started in that business that I borrowed from Mr. Barnacott, Mr. Scrimger and Mr. Fuller.”

About that time a Mr. Molosky took an interest in the initial project, called the Independent Oil Company or the Lincoln Oil Company, and advanced some funds.

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Bluebook (online)
209 N.W. 71, 235 Mich. 62, 1926 Mich. LEXIS 649, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gundry-v-scrimger-mich-1926.