In re Jewett

13 F. Cas. 585, 7 Biss. 328, 15 Nat. Bank. Reg. 126, 1877 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 162
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Wisconsin
DecidedJanuary 12, 1877
DocketCase No. 7,306
StatusPublished

This text of 13 F. Cas. 585 (In re Jewett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Jewett, 13 F. Cas. 585, 7 Biss. 328, 15 Nat. Bank. Reg. 126, 1877 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 162 (W.D. Wis. 1877).

Opinion

HOPKINS, District Judge

(after stating the facts as above). E. D. Jewett & Co. rely upon these points to defeat the adjudication in this case. 1st. That they were not partners of S. A. Jewett; and 2d. -If held to be partners, that their adjudication in the district court of Massachusetts is a bar to their being adjudicated bankrupts in this court. The counsel on both sides occupied a very wide range in their argument of the case, but I shall notice but few of the points discussed, as, in my opinion, many of them are unnecessary in the determination of the question.now involved.

There is no direct testimony to establish the existence of the partnership of the bankrupts: that is. there is no partnership agree[588]*588ment between them proved. If one can be made out, it must be from inference or implication. Taking the testimony of Samuel A. Jewett as true, there would be but little difficulty in solving that question, but as that is contradicted in some of its material parts by the other bankrupts, it becomes necessary to consider and carefully weigh it in connection with such contradictions. And in the first place I may say that the claim that he was to cut the lumber and pay three dollars stumpage, is not, I think, sustained by the evidence. The conduct of parties negatives any such agreement and confirms S. A. Jewett’s denial. It is incredible that his brothers would have allowed him to work under such an agreement for over four years without ever calling upon him for any account, or ever investigating to see to what extent he was cutting their timber. The testimony shows also that three dollars is a much larger price than was being paid for stumpage in that region during that time. Again, if Samuel was doing business for them only under that stumpage agreement, they fail to show any excuse for not looking after their taxes during that period. For if Samuel did not represent them or their interest either as agent or partner, they would, it seems to me, have looked after their own interest and have seen that their taxes were paid. And as Samuel’s conduct during that time accords with his testimony on that point, I think his evidence should prevail.

That pretense being disposed of, and that was the only ground upon which they relied to explain the manner in which the business was done and their indifference in relation to it, it becomes necessary to see whether a partnership can be established from the conduct of the parties, and the evidence of S. A. Jewett, and it must be said that S. A. Jewett’s theory of the case is corroborated by all his acts and doings in the premises, and unless he was a partner, as be says, it is difficult to see in what character he acted, unless we hold that he was their agent, and to so hold, we should have to conclude he was clothed with the most general authority to manage their interest, that is, to charge them with such liabilities as might be necessary, proper and customary in carrying on that kind of business, which would be as extensive as the authority conferred upon one partner by another. That they had great confidence in S. A. Jewett is not denied. [Before 1809 he carried on their business without restriction, cut and used their lumber, ad libitum, erected buildings, and used the proceeds of the business at his discretion, without having any interest himself in it.] 5 And unless he had understood in some way that they were partners with him, he was guilty of gross fraud and dishonesty in representing them to be such, and getting credit upon their joint names in the manner he did, and I do not believe, from his evidence and the conduct of the parties, that he did so, without their consent and authority. The manner in which they kept their accounts confirms this conclusion. If they had charged the money advanced directly to the firm of S. A. Jewett & Co., that would have been an acknowl-edgement of the existence of such a firm. In legal effect, however, the charging one-third to S. A. Jewett and two-thirds to Wisconsin land was the same thing. That recognized their liability to contribute two-thirds and S. A. Jewett one-third, which was according to their respective interests in the real estate, and the timber converted and sold by S. A. Jewett. If S. A. Jewett had been carrying on that business for himself alone, or as their agent, they would have charged the whole to him and made him pay it all to them. They were not liable for the expenses of the business simply because they owned a portion of the land, nor were they liable for any expenses if he was their tenant, agreeing to keep the mill in repair and pay stumpage as they claim. The way they kept their accounts is entirely inconsistent with any theory save that of partners. They were jointly interested in the land, in the growing timber; they were jointly interested in the mills, buildings and improvements for carrying on that kind of business; they made no agreement as to terms upon which anybody else was to use their property and cut their timber. So in view of the manner ■ of keeping their accounts in reference to this property, in connection with the conduct and testimony of S. A. Jewett, I can see no other solution of the matter than to hold that they were partners.

There is another remarkable circumstance that requires notice. They must have known that their brother was carrying on this large business of over 8100,000 a year, and to suppose that they allowed him to carry on a business of that magnitude for over four years with property of which they were the owners of two-thirds, without knowing the manner he was doing it, is too unnatural to be credited. Such indifference in regard to one’s interest cannot be accepted by courts without the most satisfactory proof. The law presumes that every man will look after his own interest, at least, must hold him to ordinary care and attention to it, and to believe that they totally neglected, for such a period, such an amount of property as they had in this case, being a two-thirds interest in over 23,000 acres of pine lands valued at from one hundred thousand to two hundred thousand dollars; requires an unreasonable amount of credulity on the part of the court. And as they fail to furnish any reasonable excuse for such neglect, I think a court may accept the testimony of 8. A. Jewett as showing the true relation between them. In [589]*589this ease there is a community of interest, one of the essential elements of a partnership, and the other one, a sharing in the profits, may be inferred from the acts of the parties and the circumstances of the case where there is no express agreement to that effect. But in this case we are not left to inference on that subject, if the testimony of S. A. Jewett is true, for he says he used the profits for the joint benefit of the parties in making improvements and paying taxes; if his testimony is true in that respect, it is as binding upon them as if their share had been paid them in money, for as to the improvements, they enhanced the value of their interest, and as to the taxes, it was the discharge of a liability which they would have had to meet with their own money if he had not paid them out of such proceeds.

This seems to be the only reasonable conclusion to be drawn from the testimony. It was claimed that if they were not partners as between themselves, they were as to third persons who had given them credit on the strength of their being partners. This might be so, although to charge a person as partner in such cases, it is necessary to show that he was cognizant of the conduct of the party who represented him to be such partner.

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Bluebook (online)
13 F. Cas. 585, 7 Biss. 328, 15 Nat. Bank. Reg. 126, 1877 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-jewett-wiwd-1877.