Kirshon, Et Ux. v. Friedman

36 A.2d 647, 349 Pa. 171, 1944 Pa. LEXIS 428
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 24, 1943
DocketAppeal, 176
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 36 A.2d 647 (Kirshon, Et Ux. v. Friedman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kirshon, Et Ux. v. Friedman, 36 A.2d 647, 349 Pa. 171, 1944 Pa. LEXIS 428 (Pa. 1943).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Chibe Justice Maxey,

This case began by a Bill in Equity asking for a decree of dissolution of an alleged partnership and for an accounting of the capital and profits of the partnership. The allegations are that in August 1937 a partnership was formed between three people, to wit, the *173 defendant, who had a 75% interest therein, his daughter Fannie Kirshon, and her husband, both of whom had a 25% interest therein. It is alleged that the partnership existed from 1937 until the date of the filing of the bill, to wit, May 1941. The bill sets forth further that prior to 1935 the defendant, Harry Friedman, was the proprietor of a wholesale electrical appliance business known as the Bell Electric Co. of- Pennsylvania, ivith place of business located at 218.Lackawanna Avenue, Scranton, and that in 1935 a corporation was formed under the name of Bell Electric Co. of Pennsylvania, Inc., which took over the business until about August 1937. It is claimed that the plaintiff, Fannie Kirshon, Avas the owner of 25 shares of the capital stock of this corporation, which represented a 25% interest therein, and that she was employed as bookkeeper and clerk and was secretary of the corporation. She was then unmarried. It is claimed also that on or about June 15, 1937, this defendant orally agreed with the plaintiffs to dissolve the corporation and to form a partnership to take over its business and to admit to . the partnership Avith a 25% interest therein plaintiff, Fannie Kirshon, and the plaintiff, Leo Kirshon, “if he should marry her” and if he should not, “such husband as she might lawfully marry”. These two plaintiffs intermarried August 19, 1937. The defendant denies that Fannie Kirshon OAvned a 25% interest in the corporation. He avers that she simply executed the Articles of Incorporation for the sole purpose of complying with the Business Corporation Law of Pennsylvania, which provides for three incorporators. He says that he paid in all the capital of $10,000. with which the corporation began business and that although a certificate for 49 shares of stock was made out in her [Fannie Kirshon] name the stock was never delivered to her but remained in the possession of the respondent. The respondent also denies the allegation as to- any oral agreement betAveen the two plaintiffs and'the respondent to dissolve *174 the corporation and to form a partnership to take over its business and to admit to the partnership with a 25 % interest therein the two plaintiffs if they should marry. It is also denied that Fannie Kirshon ever surrendered any stock to the corporation, since she owned no stock. The case was heard by Judge William R. Lewis, but he retired from the bench before he disposed of it. The matter was then referred to former Judge Albert E. Swoyer as Referee. He reported on the record made before Judge Lewis: “The plaintiffs have failed to meet the burden of proving a partnership and the Chancellor finds as a fact, that there was no partnership, and no partnership was ever organized between the plaintiffs and the defendant to conduct the business of the Bell Electric Co. of Pennsylvania.” (He also found that the defendant did not at any time agree with the plaintiff Leo Kirshon or Fannie Kirshon to dissolve a corporation or form a partnership to take over the business and to admit to the partnership with a 25% interest therein, the plaintiff Fannie Kirshon and the plaintiff, Leo Kirshon. ) The Referee made numerous findings of fact and stated several conclusions of law. The plaintiffs filed thirty-one exceptions to these findings and conclusions of law. The court did not, as Rule 71 requires, “sustain or dismiss” the exceptions “in whole or in part”. The Court ignored the exceptions and on its own part made seven findings of fact. The basic statement of the court below is found in the court’s “discussion”, and it reads as follows: “Whether there was an actual legal partnership formed is not the exact question in this case. The plaintiffs were given a one-fourth interest in a business and are entitled to an account when all evidence of their ownership is taken from them and they are put out of their property.”

While the court below incorrectly stated the issue in this case, the Referee showed a firm grasp of the issue when he said: “. . . the burden of proving that a partnership was formed (as distinct from proving that there *175 was an agreement to form a partnership) and the nature of that partnership is upon the plaintiffs, and that if they fail in so doing then their case must fail. The distinction to be noted is that this action is for the dissolution of a partnership and an accounting of the profits thereof; therefore, whatever might be the rights of the plaintiffs in an action for specific performance of a contract to form a partnership, if such a contract existed, or for damages for breach of the said contract, such rights cannot be adjudicated in the case before us.”

The opinion of the court below does not enlighten us as to how it reached the conclusion that the referee ought to be reversed. The opinion refers to Exhibit No. 1 and says: “It was well substantiated by independent testimony” but just what the court thinks this paper proved, in other words what its legal effeet was, does not appear. This paper was dated August 20,1937, just one day after the marriage of the two plaintiffs. It reads as follows: “I, Harry Friedman, owner of the Bell Electric Company of Pennsylvania, hereby agree to transfer 25% (Twenty five) per cent, of the Bell Electric Company stock;-for the sum of one ($1.00) Dollar and other considerations, to my daughter Fannie Friedman and her future husband whoever he may be, being married to him lawfully, both in the Court House and in the Jewish tradition, which he is to share with her thereafter. Signed (Written) Harry Friedman (Typewritten) Owner (Written) Bell Elec Co.” It will be noted that this paper refers to Bell Electric Company stock, obviously referring to the corporation of that name. It furnishes no proof whatever of the existence of the partnership pleaded. At its maximum it would only tend to prove that the defendant “agreed to transfer 25% of the Bell Electric Company stock, for the sum of $1. and other considerations”, to his daughter Fannie and her future husband “whoever he may be”. (Fannie already had a husband twenty-four hours before this paper was signed.) This paper certainly does not prove the *176 existence of any partnership. If this paper constitutes a valid, contract (and its integrity is challenged by the defendant) it gives the plaintiff only an action for its breach, but it does not support a bill filed by one partner for an accounting of an alleged partnership, and based solely on an alleged oral agreement “to form a partnership”. In Bowman v. Gum, Inc., 321 Pa. 516, 184 A. 258, this court speaking through Mr. Justice Linn, said (525): “The pleadings determine the relief that may be afforded: ‘Neither allegations without proof nor proof without allegations, nor allegations and proof which do not substantially correspond, will entitle complainant to relief, unless the defect be remedied by amendment’: Spangler Brewing Co. v. McHenry, 242 Pa. 522, 528, 89 A. 665.”

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Bluebook (online)
36 A.2d 647, 349 Pa. 171, 1944 Pa. LEXIS 428, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kirshon-et-ux-v-friedman-pa-1943.