Keough v. Foreman

33 La. Ann. 1434
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 15, 1881
DocketNo. 8425
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 33 La. Ann. 1434 (Keough v. Foreman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Keough v. Foreman, 33 La. Ann. 1434 (La. 1881).

Opinions

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Fenner, J.

The plaintiffs are heirs at law of Patrick Keough, who died in 1871. From 1867 to June, 1870, Patrick Keough was engaged in a planting and commercial partnership with the defendant, C. W. Foreman ; Keough was the manager, bookkeeper and cashier of the commercial part of the business, which was that of a country store, while Foreman conducted the planting business.

Being desirous of dissolving and settling up their partnership, in 1870, each partner selected a friend, to act together, as experts, in posting the books, taking off a balance sheet, and making a statement of partnership assets and liabilities and of the accounts between the-partners, as a basis for settlement. Keough chose Thos. J. Sloan, and Foreman chose C. C. Duson. These gentlemen received from the partners the books, memoranda and papers of the firm,'and proceeded to post the books and ascertain the assets and liabilities. They consumed several weeks in their task, during which they had all needed conferences with the partners, and finally submitted the result of their labors to the parties. After a cursory examination of the experts’ report, the-partners agreed to accept it as correct, and proceeded immediately, on the very same day, to make a division in kind of the notes, accounts [1436]*1436and other assets. There remained, under the settlement, a cash balance of about $350, due by Keough to Foreman, which the former then and there paid in cash; and both parties expressed themselves satisfied with the settlement. Keough died in the year following, and up to the time of his death he and Foreman remained friends, and ho never, directly or indirectly, intimated to Foreman any dissatisfaction with the settlement. After the settlement, the books and papers of the partnership remained in the possession of Keough, and, at his death, passed into the hands of his widow, who qualified as administratrix of his succession, and so remained until they were transferred to the heirs, the present plaintiffs, one of whom, Richard Keough, resided in the parish of St. Landry from about the time of Keough’s death. After being in possession of these documents for seven or eight years, he and his coheirs commenced proceedings to open this account only in 1878.

The first suit was brought simply for an account, which was resisted by Foreman on the ground of prior settlement. That suit was thereupon voluntarily discontinued, and the present action was brought to anntil the settlement, on the ground of errors alleged specifically, and to have a new and corrected account taken, and praying for the appointment of auditors for that purpose. To this suit defendant filed an exception that plaintiffs were estopped from alleging that there had been a settlement by their judicial allegations in their former suit that there had been no settlement. The District Court sustained the exception ; but on appeal this Court reversed the judgment and remanded the case.

Defendant then filed his answer, embracing a general denial, and then setting up specially that there had been a final settlement years ago, during the lifetime of the deceased, which was satisfactory to' both parties ; and, therefore, praying that plaintiffs’ suit be dismissed.

The court, thereafter, in compliance with the prayer of plaintiffs’ petition, appointed auditors “ to examine the accounts of the firm of Keough & Foreman, and to state the same,” etc.

These auditors, representing to the court that “ their labors had been very arduous, extending through more than a month and embracing a number of complicated books and accounts, besides the examination of witnesses,” presented their report, which exhibited a result not substantially different from the settlement which had been made between the parties themselves.

The defendant moved to homologate the report. Plaintiffs filed . opposition to its homologation. The case was tried, and the District Judge found, as stated in his reasons, that the auditors’ report was correct, and that “ in its result it agrees substantially with the report of the experts who assisted in the settlement made by the partners in [1437]*14371870.” He also found from the said report, and from all the evidence, that the said settlement, made in 1870, was a final and definitive settlement between the partners, • * * and that no errors had been shown to justify its disturbance.” He, therefore, rendered judgment “ that the auditors’ report be homologated, that the said settlement, made in 1870, be recognized as final and definitive, and the suit be dismissed at plaintiffs’ costs.”

From this judgment the defendant appealed, and at our term of 1880 we remanded the cause for further proceedings, on the ground of certain rulings of the court excluding evidence offered by the plaintiffs, which we held to have beeh improperly excluded.

This lengthy recital of former proceedings herein has been given because plaintiffs strenuously contend that, by the effect thereof, both the defendant and the court are precluded from urging or considering objections to the opening of the original settlement, but must be confined to issues growing out of the auditors’ report and the opposition thereto.

We cannot sustain the correctness of this position. This being an action to set aside an acknowledged settlement, on the ground of error, of course the defendant could not set up the settlement, by way of exception, in bar of the action. _ He was compelled to set up its finality and fairness, as he has done, as a special defense, in his answer. It went, with his general denial, to the merits, and was only to be determined upon the merits. He could not prevent the appointment of auditors-by the court, nor the reception of evidence tending to establish the errors alleged. This was a proper order, in such a case — the object being two-fold, to determine whether there were such errors as justified the opening of the settlement, and, if so, to present the basis of a new account. When the auditors made their report, which substantially sustained the original settlement, at least in its result, defendant waived no right by moving to have it homologated, the effect of such homologation being to maintain the original settlement. Nor did we, in remanding the case, for the reception of evidence improperly excluded, conclude any right of any party to the cause on the final determination of the entire merits.

Such was the view taken by the District Judge, who concluded that the settlement made between the parties should not be disturbed, and rendered judgment dismissing the suit.

The following views, expressed by Chief Justice Marshall, command the ready assent of the legal mind :

” It is the right of every individual to exercise his own judgment on his own affairs, and to arrange them in such manner as his own will may dictate. Where this arrangement is made under the fair exercise [1438]*1438of judgment, without imposition, and with a requisite knowledge of the ■subject, it is certainly conclusive, unless the arrangement be in its nature alterable at the will of the person who has made it. It is a necessary consequence of this right, that an individual who has settled his accounts with another, and arranged the transactions between them, in a manner which receives the full and free assent of his mind, has a right to consider those transactions closed, and is consequently bound so to consider them.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 La. Ann. 1434, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keough-v-foreman-la-1881.