Johnson v. Mantz

27 N.W. 467, 69 Iowa 710
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 7, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 27 N.W. 467 (Johnson v. Mantz) 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
Johnson v. Mantz, 27 N.W. 467, 69 Iowa 710 (iowa 1886).

Opinion

Peck, J.

I. The petition shows that the plaintiff and defendant Mantz are copartners in the business of quarrying stone; that the defendant the Keokuk & Northwestern Railway Company is indebted to the firm in a large sum for stone sold to it; that plaintiff, having no access to the books of the firm, has no knowledge of the amounts of money received by, Mantz, who, in the business, acts fraudulently and in bad faith, and is insolvent; that the railroad company is about to pay him a large sum of money which he claims is due him individually; and that plaintiff will suffer irreparable loss and injury thereby. The petition prays for an accounting between the partners, and that plaintiff have judgment for the amount due him; that a receiver be appointed to take charge of the business and property of the firm, and that a temporary injunction be allowed against the railroad company, restraining it from paying over the money until a receiver be appointed in the case. On the day the petition was filed a temporary injunction was allowed, as prayed for in the petition. Defendant Mantz, by an answer and cross-bill, among other things, alleges cause for the dissolution of the firm, and an actual dissolution by agreement. lie denies the charges of fraud and bad faith, and the allegation of the petition that he is insolvent, or that he refuses to make settlement with plaintiff of the affairs of the firm. He further denies that there is any sum due from the railroad company to thecopartnership, and that whatever sum it owes is due to the-[712]*712defendant individually on account of stone furnished by him from quarries in which plaintiff had no interest. The railroad .company made no answer, and default was entered against it for non-appearance in the case. The cause was sent to a referee, who returned two reports; and, after the last one was filed, a decree was entered in which a judgment was rendered against both defendants, Mantz and the railroad company, for $378.88. The referee reports no findings as to the amount of the indebtedness of the railroad company, and the decree makes no provision for the disposition of the property of the firm which the findings of the referee show to be on hand. The evidence taken by the referee is not before us. '

1. JUDGMENT: prayer lor rehet. . .amount due not determined. IE Ve are of the opinion that the abstracts of the record, upon which the case is submitted to us, exhibit two manifest errors which we will proceed to point 1 x out- The decree against the railroad company for qie am0unt found due to plaintiff from defendant Mantz is erroneous for two reasons: (1) No such relief is sought against that defendant in the petition, nor is general relief prayed for therein. All plaintiff asks, as against it, is that it be temporarily enjoined from paying the amount of its indebtedness untill a receiver be appointed. Kelief cannot be granted by a decree which is not specially prayed for, or within the contemplation of a general prayer for relief. This is a familiar rule, in the support of which we cannot be expected to cite authorities. (2) The referee reports no findings as to the amount of the indebtedness of the railroad company to the firm, . A Surely it cannot by claimed that, without a finding by the referee as to snch indebtedness, the court could, upon the report of the referee, render a judgment against the railroad company for the sum found to be due plaintiff from Mantz. The referee should have found whether the company owed .the firm or Mantz; if the firm, the amount of such indebtedness. These propositions are too plain to admit of controversy.

[713]*7133.--: default: what admitted by. III. Counsel for plaintiff insist that, as the railroad company was adjudged in default, and no motion was made to set aside such adjudication, it cannot now object J to the decree thereon rendered against it. This position is not correct. The default admitted the matters Well pleaded, and entitled the plaintiff to recover thereon nothing more than the relief sought in the petition. It did not admit the amount- of the indebtedness, for it was not alleged; and plaintiff was not entitled to a judgment-thereon fcgainst the company, for no judgment was prayed for against it. ness, which shows that Mantz is indebted to t plaintiff in the sum ot the ludgment. The finddn§s s^low certain personal property owned by ^l’m on hand. The value of tlieproperty is stated in the findings. No provision is

4. PARTNER-sun?:.settle-' mentiorba? propMtyunsold' IV. The referee finds that the partnership had been dissolved, and states an account growing out of the firm’s busimade in the decree for the disposition of this property. Ordinarily, in such cases, the property ought to be sold, and the proceeds entered into the final accounting between the parties. But if justice may be done by permitting one of the parties to retain it, and no objection is made thereto, such course may be pursued. See Liudl. Parta., 670. Defendants did not object to the account stated by the referee, to his findings, or to the report generally, for the reason that no sale was ordered. We conclude that the failure of the decree to contain an order for sale of -the property does not affirmatively appear to be erroneous.

V. Defendants complain of the accounts stated by the referee. They do not present to us the account in full, with sufficient of the findings to enable us to determine as - to its correctness. It is therefore impossible for us to pass upon this objection to the account.

[714]*7145. practice: hearing in vacation: chauge of place: waiver. i [713]*713VI. When the cause finally. came up on the referee’s report, it ivas agreed that it should be submitted and decided [714]*714in vacation. It was further agreed that it should be argued at Mount Pleasant. It was argued and decided at Port Madison. The decision was in vacation, pursuant to the agreement, and, as the record shows that counsel on both sides were present at the argument, without any objection to the place of hearing, we will presume that they waived objection thereto.

agreement for decision in vacation: place of decision. YII. It was insisted that, as there was no agreement as to the place of decision, the cause should have been decided at Keokuk, where the action was pending. But an agreement for a decision in vacation implies that the judge will decide it at his chambers, or Wherever he may be when he finally considers the case.

7. ruAOTrcE on appeal: presumption trial court. YIII. The referee made two reports. Counsel for defendants insists that he had no authority to make the second, for the reason that after the first report the cause was not sent back to him by the court. Upon this point the separate abstracts of the parties are in conflict; the plaintiff shows there was such an order, and the defendants that there is no record showing it. Defendants claim, upon these abstracts, that the record fails to show that the case was sent a second time to the referee. We assume defendant’s abstract to be correct. The court below acted upon the "two reports when they were presented, and overruled exceptions thereto, based upon the ground that the case had not been sent back to the referee.. The court, in effect, held by this action that defendants’ objections were not based upon facts.

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Bluebook (online)
27 N.W. 467, 69 Iowa 710, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-mantz-iowa-1886.