Holladay v. Land & River Imp. Co.

57 F. 774, 6 C.C.A. 560, 1893 U.S. App. LEXIS 2206
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedOctober 2, 1893
DocketNo. 58
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 57 F. 774 (Holladay v. Land & River Imp. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holladay v. Land & River Imp. Co., 57 F. 774, 6 C.C.A. 560, 1893 U.S. App. LEXIS 2206 (7th Cir. 1893).

Opinions

FULLER, Circuit Justice,

after stating the facts, delivered the ppinion of the court.

As by the terms of the agreements of May 25, 1855, and August 12, 1857, there was, in effect, community of interest in capital, profit and loss, and subject-matter, Ewing and Sweetser correctly referred to themselves as partners, and the executors to the “land partnership” between them. The enterprise was not limited to a particular adventure, nor merely to the purchase of land to be held for advance in value. Town sites, and interests in town sites, town lots, half-breed land scrip and other scrip, shares in land companies and associations, were to be acquired. If found advisable some of the property might be sold, and the proceeds divided, or reinvested for the joint account. The claims and purchases were referred to as joint capital or joint means. Each was to contribute equally to the expenses of the business. Joint land books, and regular accounts of expenses and costs, were to be kept. One-half of all the profits and gains, either in property or money, after all debts and advances were paid, belonged to each. ' Sweetser was-to cause land scrip to be located, and to sell lands, but to consult with Ewing in large transactions, and so on. The defendants rightly admitted the existence of the partnership in their answer.

The question to be determined is not whether the legal title to the undivided one-half in controversy passed to Sweetser by the deed of December 11, 1866, but whether, through a settlement of the affairs of the partnership by and between Ewing’s executors and Sweetser, the latter acquired such equitable right thereto as justified the decree of the circuit court. Unquestionably, this real estate belonged to the firm, and while the duration of the partnership was specified as five years from May 25, 1855, (including the extension,) purchases of many hundred acres were apparently made after that period expired, and the partnership affairs, confessedly, had not been closed up when Ewing died, May 29, 1866. The contention that by the execution of the declaration of trust of July 28, 1860, the lands therein embraced (‘.eased to be partnership real estate does not commend itself to our judgment. Under the agreement of May 25, 1855, the party in whom the title was vested to be held for sale for joint and mutual benefit was to execute a declaration of trust on request. This particular declaration was not executed on any settlement of accounts and -adjustment of equities between the partners, and lands were subsequently purchased; but, as far as it went, it furnished proper evidence that the lands named therein belonged to the enterprise, and not that the shares of an ascertained surplus were thereby transferred, and taken out of commerce.

Real estate purchased with partnership .funds for partnership uses, though the title be taken in the name of one partner, is in equity treated as personal property, so far as is necessary to pay [785]*785the debts of the partnership, and to adjust the equities of the partners; and there may he cases of a partnership confined to dealing in real estate, where it might well he held that, being thus a commodity, it should he regarded as converted into personalty, out and out. ' Riddle v. Whitehill, 135 U. S. 621, 10 Sup. Ct. Rep. 924; Allen v. Withrow, 110 U. S. 119, 3 Sup. Ct. Rep. 517; Brown v. Slee, 103 U. S. 828. In any view, until the equities are adjusted and the surplus ascertained, the property is held subject to the same equitable rights and liens of the partners as if it were personalty, and the control of the surviving partner extends to the right to sell it, or so much of it as may be necessary to pay the partnership debts, or to satisfy all just claims of the surviving partners; and such sale vests the equitable ownership, so that the purchaser can, in a court of equity, compel the heirs and devisees of the deceased to convey their title. Shanks v. Klein, 104 U. S. 18. If he sells and conveys the same in good faith for a, valuable consideration, without an order of court, he passes the equitable title to the purchaser. Walling v. Burgess, 122 Ind. 299, 22 N. E. Rep. 419, and 23 N. E. Rep. 1076. Of course, the power of an executor to convey his testator’s real estate must he found in the provisions of the will, or in the order of the appropriate court, upon proper application, under statute. But the executor of a deceased partner, if not a member of the firm, may agree with the survivor that the share of the deceased may he ascertained in a particular way, or he taken at a certain value; and if the executor and the survivor, in good faith, come to an accounting respecting the partnership affairs, and settle the same as a final account, such settlement cannot he overhauled, except on the ground of fraud (or such unfairness as is equivalent thereto) or mistake. Colly. Partn. (6th, Ed.) 382; Lindl. Partn. 1069; Sage v. Woodin, 66 N. Y. 578; Roys v. Vilas, 18 Wis. 174; Kimball v. Lincoln, 99 Ill. 578; Ludlow v. Cooper, 4 Ohio St. 1; Arnold v. Wainwright, 6 Minn. 358, (Gil. 241.)

The opinion in Valentine v. Wysor, 123 Ind. 47, 23 K. E. Rep. 1076, discusses the general subject, with much citation of authority. That was the case of a hill filed by the heirs of one Jack to set, aside a conveyance by Jack’s executors to Wysor, his surviving: partner, in settlement of partnership affairs, and for an accounting, complainants offering to pay whatever might he found due. The conveyance was made in 1866, and the suit commenced in 1880. The court held that the power conferred by the will to settle, adjust, and compromise testator’s debts, and to settle with his partners, and to sell and convey his real estate, included the power to settle at discretion, and to sell and convey according to the executors’ host judgment; that a surviving partner has the right to the control and possession of the property of the firm, and may dispose of it in order to adjust the partnership accounts; that the rights of the heirs are subject to the adjustment of all claims between the partners, and attach only to the surplus which remains [786]*786when the debts are paid, and the affairs wound up;that if the' transaction was, for any reason, invalid, then the property would remain partnership property, unaffected by what had transpired; that the conveyance by the executors would not be disturbed by a court of equity unless impeached as fraudulent or unfair, or unless collusion were shown; that, a settlement and accounting between the executors and the surviving partner having been had, a court of equity would not, after a lapse of 14 years, unexplained by circumstances,' decree the opening up of the account, although it appeared that the settlement had been irregularly made.

By the agreement of August 12, 1857, Ewing and Sweetser declare their intention and belief that, if either or both parties die before the business is finally closed up, their legal representatives should, will be able to, and can do so; and the correspondence shows that Miner was fully authorized by Ewing to conduct the negotiations pending from January, 1866, to Ewing’s death, for a complete settlement and adjustment of the partnership affairs.

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Bluebook (online)
57 F. 774, 6 C.C.A. 560, 1893 U.S. App. LEXIS 2206, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holladay-v-land-river-imp-co-ca7-1893.