Harris v. R. W. Hart & Co.

1944 OK 364, 154 P.2d 759, 195 Okla. 5, 1944 Okla. LEXIS 654
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 24, 1944
DocketNo. 31294.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1944 OK 364 (Harris v. R. W. Hart & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harris v. R. W. Hart & Co., 1944 OK 364, 154 P.2d 759, 195 Okla. 5, 1944 Okla. LEXIS 654 (Okla. 1944).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

On the 24th day of August, 1933, James A. Harris, hereinafter called plaintiff, commenced this action against R. W. Hart & Company, a partnership, et al., to recover 25 per cent of the amount paid to the defendants, R. W. Hart & Company, certified public accountants, for refunds in tax claims for the years 1922, 1924, 1925, 1926, and 1927. The refunds were made to nine Rollstone corporations operating as the Continental Petroleum Company and these corporations are involved in this proceeding nominally and incidentally. The date of August 24, 1933, the date of filing of the action, is very material in a discussion of the proceeding and should be constantly noted.

The court first tried the question of whether the plaintiff and the defendants, R. W. Hart & Company, were engaged in a joint venture, and having found that they were so engaged, the part of the record constituting a determination of this question is not presented by either the plaintiff or the cross-appellants. ’ Subsequent to the determination of the question of joint venture the court proceeded to conduct an accounting between the parties, and at the conclusion of the trial to the court without the intervention of a jury judgment was rendered for the plaintiff for $2,966.02, with interest thereon from the 28th day of July, 1942. The plaintiff has appealed on the theory that the judgment is inadequate, and the defendants, R. W. Hart & Company, have appealed attacking the correctness of any judgment against them. The record discloses that plaintiff sought recovery of $7,500 which he alleged to be one-fourth of the amount paid to the defendants. At some stage of the proceeding not definitely disclosed, James A. Harris, plaintiff herein, assigned his interest in the claim to Addie Deichman, which is also incidental and not involved in a discussion of the question presented on the appeal. Reference to the plaintiff shall mean James A. Harris and reference to the defendants, R. W. Hart & Company, certified public accountants, unless other specific reference is made necessary.

After the petition had been filed on August 24, 1933, the defendants filed a response in a proceeding on injunction in which it is stated that the claim for the refund for taxes for the year 1922 *6 had been abandoned as hopeless. Defendants support .this by an affidavit of one of the members of the partnership of R. W. Hart & Company. Plaintiff thereafter dismissed his action and the case proceeded in its first stages on the theory that the 1922 claim had been abandoned, and at the time, plaintiff was not entitled to any amounts by reason of recovery for the 1922 taxes. The accounting feature of the case was tried commencing June 3, 1942, long after a former adjudication as to the relation of the parties and long after the commencement of the proceeding to em-pound certain funds of the R. W. Hart & Company deposited in a local bank, and at the trial of the present proceeding defendants established that the attempt to collect the refund for the 1922 taxes had been revived. The expenses incurred in the revivor of the 1922 tax claim is one of the chief sources of contention between the parties and that should be kept constantly in mind in this discussion.

The trial court found:

“That by virtue of a joint adventure engaged in by plaintiff and R. W. Hart & Company, and its members and on account of the contract made between said parties bearing date September 6, 1929, said plaintiff herein, James A. Harris, is the absolute owner and entitled to recover 25 per cent of the net profits or amount earned, paid to, and received by the said R. W. Hart & Company and its members, from Continental Petroleum Company under said contract and services rendered, $7,000.00 of said earnings are now on deposit in the National Bank of Tulsa, Oklahoma, the exact amount due plaintiff to be determined by an accounting to be made and had.
“The defendants in the prosecution of said joint adventure, pursuant to contract with the Continental Petroleum Company and the verbal agreement with the plaintiff, received the sum of $46,157.23; that the -defendants’ disbursement, pursuant to said contract, was the sum of $34,293.25. That the net proceeds resulting from the prosecution of said joint adventure is the sum of $11,864.08; that the plaintiff is entitled to an undivided twenty-five per cent thereof of the sum of $2,966.02 with interest from the 28th day of July, 1942; that there is now on deposit in the National Bank of Tulsa held under the temporary injunction issued herein at the instance of the plaintiff, upon special deposit in the sum of $7,000.0.0 to await the final judgment in this action.
“It is, therefore, considered, ordered, adjudged and decreed by the court that the plaintiff have and recover as trustee for the use and benefit of his sister, Addie Deichman, out of and from the money on deposit in the National Bank of Tulsa, Oklahoma, the sum of $2,-966.02, with interest thereon from the 28th day of July, 1942, to this date at the rate of six per cent per annum.”

There is no dispute about the amount of $46,157.23 received by the defendants. The first argument presented is proposition one, which is divided into three subdivisions. Plaintiff asserts that the court erred in allowing any testimony of any expenses incurred in connection with any of the claims after the date of dissolution of the partnership. It is plaintiff’s position that when defendants collected the $46,157.23 and concealed the collection, the dissolution of the joint venture was effected and any agency of any of the defendants revoked, and thereafter the plaintiff was not to be charged with any of the expenses incurred in attempting to collect the claims. The trial court consistently refused to adopt this theory and in this there was no error. Plaintiff was entitled under his contract to one-fourth of the amount paid the defendants less expenses or one-fourth of the net amount recovered, and the question presented is, what, as a matter of law, constitutes legitimate expenses incurred in recovering the $46,157.23?

Aside from proposition one above the controversy arises over two matters. The first is the claim referred to as the 1922 claim and was a claim prosecuted in and out of court for the refund of the 1922 taxes. The expense for the attempted collection of this claim is included in the $34,293.25 allowed by the *7 court. It is the position of the plaintiff that no expense incurred in connection with this claim is authorized after March 1, 1934, when the defendants filed their response and affidavit in the proceeding stating that the claim had been abandoned. In 1934 the defendants came to the conclusion after repeated conferences and consultations with the various federal departments that this claim could not be sustained. They therefore filed the response and affidavit above referred to on March 1, 1934. Thereafter plaintiff dismissed his second cause of action stating that any claim therefor was premature. Thereafter the attempt to collect the 1922 taxes was revived and a great portion of the expense involved in the prosecution thereof was allowed as heretofore stated, and in this there was no error though there had been no refund on the 1922 tax claim at the time of the entry of the judgment herein. Plaintiff in his dismissal did not abandon any right to recover any portion of this claim if collected.

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Bluebook (online)
1944 OK 364, 154 P.2d 759, 195 Okla. 5, 1944 Okla. LEXIS 654, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-r-w-hart-co-okla-1944.