King v. . Leighton

3 N.E. 594, 100 N.Y. 386, 55 Sickels 386, 1885 N.Y. LEXIS 989
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 24, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 3 N.E. 594 (King v. . Leighton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
King v. . Leighton, 3 N.E. 594, 100 N.Y. 386, 55 Sickels 386, 1885 N.Y. LEXIS 989 (N.Y. 1885).

Opinion

Ruger, Ch. J.

The General Term reversed the judgment entered in favor of the plaintiff, upon an accounting between partners, on the ground that the referee erroneously allowed him the profits made upon certain unfinished contracts, which were completed after the assumed dissolution of. the firm, occasioned by the bankruptcy of the plaintiff. This was held to follow from the effect, ascribed by that court, to the acts of the plaintiff and his receiver and assignee in bankruptcy, in collecting rent from the defendant for the use of the plaintiff’s shops and machinery, in completing such contracts. The partnership agreement between the plaintiff and defendant provided for the formation of a firm to carry on the business of building bridges together under the name of T. Leighton '& Co., at *389 Buffalo, the plaintiff to contribute shop-room, power and machinery as his share of capital in the enterprise and to receive one-third of the profits, and the defendant to devote his personal attention, contribute whatever .additional capital was necessary to cony on the business, and have two-thirds of the profits. It was held that the collection of rent for the use of such property after plaintiff’s bankruptcy, indicated an intention on his part to waive any interest in the profits thereafter made, in completing the Unfinished contracts, and was equivalent to a withdrawal of the capital contributed by him to the firm. It was further held that the plaintiff did not thereby waive his interest in the assets of the firm, but that such interest consisted only of a share in the value of the contracts as they existed at the time of the bankruptcy, and that the defendant by his appropriation of the firm’s contracts after plaintiff’s bankruptcy, became liable to that extent only to the plaintiff. We are unable to agree with either of the propositions stated.

The action was brought for an accounting between partners and incidentally to set aside and vacate a written release of plaintiff s claim against the firm of T. Leighton & Co., executed by him to the defendant, on February 2S, 1873, about eight months after the bankruptcy, and which was claimed to have been procured by the defendant through fraudulent representations as to the value of plaintiff’s interest in the assets of the firm.

The referee found upon evidence, sufficient as we think to support the finding, the fact that such fraudulent representations were made by the defendant, and that the release was given by the plaintiff in reliance thereon. He thereupon held that the release was void, and ordered a general accounting as to all partnership matters between the parties, and the same was thereupon had before the referee, and resulted in a judgment in plaintiff’s favor.

The rent in question appears to have been paid under the following circumstances: About the time of the plaintiff’s bankruptcy, he and the defendant entered into a contract *390 whereby the -defendant agreed thereafter, to pay $20 per day for the use of the shops, power and machinery, and subsequently in July, 1873, after the partnership work had been substantially completed, modified the same by agreeing to pay for such property, with some increased facilities, the sum of $35 per day. During the period covered'by this contract the defendant occupied the premises in question not only for the purpose of completing the partnership work, but also in prosecuting an extensive business on his individual account. No objection was ever made by .him to the payment of such rent, or claim that he was entitled to the possession of such shops, power and machinery free of rent by virtue of the partnership agreement. It does not appear that any thing was said at the time of making this agreement between the parties as to the special reasons why rent was required to be paid, or with reference to a transfer of the plaintiff’s interest in the firm assets to the defendant, or a release thereof, or a withdrawal of plaintiff’s capital from the firm, or the manner of completing or closing up its unfinished business.

We do not think under these circumstances that it was a necessary or legitimate deduction from the facts, that the acceptance of rent operated as a release of plaintiff’s interest in the partnership assets, or as the indication of an intention to waive his claim to a share of the prospective profits which might arise from the uncompleted business of the firm. The contract to pay rent has a legitimate operation, as a modification of the partnership agreement, induced by the changed conditions effected by the plaintiff’s bankruptcy, a-nd the individual business expected to be thereafter carried on by the defendant, without extending it by implication to a subject not mentioned by either ' party at the time, and probably not within their contemplation. It is altogether probable that the plaintiff, induced by the misrepresentations of the defendant as to the prosperity of the firm business and his interest therein, was led to believe it had but little value, and was too insignificant to require, special stipulation or care; but it is nevertheless true that neither party did at that time enter into express *391 stipulations with reference either to the completed or ineompleted business of the firm. ' When the firm became dissolved by the plaintiff’s bankruptcy it was not permissible for the defendant to take new contracts and carry on the business in its name, and being apparently desirous of still continuing in the same line of business at the same place, it became necessary for him to first acquire that right from the plaintiff or his assignee.

Nothing appears in the case to rebut the inference that an amount was agreed upon as rent, apportioned to the individual business expected thereafter to be carried on by the defendant in the demised premises, and that inference is strengthened by the fact that a largely increased sum was paid as rent after the partnership business was completed. The finding that the express release of the plaintiff’s interest in the firm assets to the defendant, was fraudulent and void, would seem to require as a necessary consequence, a similar finding as to the validity of an implied release, founded apparently upon acts induced by the same influences. The implication of a contract between parties upon a subject to which their attention has been directed and which they have omitted to provide for, .by express stipulation, should not be made by a court, except to enforce a manifest equity, or to reach a result which the unequivocal acts, of the parties indicate an intention to effect.

Having arrived at the conclusion that the receipt of rent did not have the effect claimed for it by the respondent, it remains to be seen whether any error occurred on the trial which required a reversal of the judgment by the General Term.

It is claimed that such error was committed in allowing the plaintiff to recover the profits made after the dissolution of the firm as shown by the amount actually received, instead of awarding him the value of the pending contracts at the time of dissolution. Reference to the authorities does not justify the claim made on behalf of the defendant. The elementary writers concur uniformly in the proposition that the bankruptcy of one member of a firm, works a dissolution of the partnership only to the extent of disabling it from entering into any new

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Bluebook (online)
3 N.E. 594, 100 N.Y. 386, 55 Sickels 386, 1885 N.Y. LEXIS 989, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/king-v-leighton-ny-1885.