Lefevre v. Silo

112 A.D. 464, 98 N.Y.S. 321, 1906 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 707
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedApril 20, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 112 A.D. 464 (Lefevre v. Silo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lefevre v. Silo, 112 A.D. 464, 98 N.Y.S. 321, 1906 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 707 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinions

Ingraham, J.:

The complaint alleges that in the month of September, 1898, the plaintiff’s intestate and the defendant entered into an agreement, terminable by either on' sixty days’ notice to' the other, whereby it was agreed between them that the plaintiff’s intestate should perform and render certain work, labor and services for the defendant' in his business known as Fifth Avenue Art Gallery in New York city, from and after October 1, 1898, and until May 1, 1903, unless sooner terminated by either, at an agreed compensation to be paid by defendant to plaintiff’s intestate of one-sixth of the net profits of said business; that the plaintiff’s intestate did perform and render to said Silo certain work, labor and services from October 1, 1898, until on or about March 9, 1900, the date of his decease; that one-sixth of the net profits of the said business during the said period of time were at least the sum of $4,418.57, of which there was a balance due and payable from the defendant to the plaintiff of at- least the sum of $2,140.50; and the complaint demands judgment for that amount. .

The defendant admitted the death of the plaintiff’s intestate, denied the other allegations of the complaint, and set up a counter[466]*466claim, for money loaned by the defendant to the plaintiff’s intestate amounting to $1,451.93, .and demanded an affirmative judgment against the plaintiff.

. The court dismissed-this counterclaim and held that the plaintiff was entitled to recover, leaving it to the jury to determine the amount. To prove the cause of action alleged in the complaint the plaintiff called one O’Brien, who testified that-he took part in an interview between himself, the defendant and the plaintiff’s intestate some time in October, 1899; that .an arrangement was then made by which each- of the parties should draw S$2,.000 a year, which should be an expense of the business, and that two-thirds of the profits was to go tó the defendant, and the other óne-third was to be divided between the plaintiff’s 'intestate and the witness; that this agreement'was not reduced to writing; that prior to this time-the plaintiff’s intestate had been an employee of the .defendant at 43 Liberty street, and that this arrangement contemplated the leasing of an uptown, store; that the plaintiff’s intestate and the witness were to do the work incident to the gathering together and cataloguing and general details of the business, and the defend^ ant was to do the selling; that this business Would be started immediately on the securing of the lease, and it. was started shortly-after ■that. The witness' was- then asked : “ When Hr. Silo said that he Would take two-thirds and the other one-third to be divided between you two, was anything said-by either of you or Mr. Lefevre in regard- to that?” to whifeli the witness answered, “It was understood that we were to get each one-sixth, divide that one-third equally between us. That was agreed upon by all three, yes. The words were the one-third was to be divided between you two boys. Tes,, one-third of the profits: The $2,000 annually was an expense of the business which we were to draw for our living expenses and was to be considered as an expense, charged to salary account.” He further testified that he was subsequently present at a conversation in the uptown store between the. plaintiff’s, in testate and the defendant ; that “ Mr. Silo came in one morning and said that A- this was after the books had been balanced and the amount of. profit, for the preceding year determined.. This was in either the latter part of September or the first part of October, 1899-, Mr. Silo came into the office and said that the amount - of the profits that would be [467]*467apportioned to us each would be one-eighth. Mr. Lefevre objected to that. Well, Mr. Silo said,, that would be the amount that he was going to allow, no mattei* what he said, and if he did not like it he could do the other tiling. Mr. Lefevre said I will not take that or accept that as-a settlement; ” that the nature of the business carried on at this store was a general auction business, selling goods on commission; that there was besides that a line of business consisting of the purchasing of goods and selling them, a sort of general merchandising in connection with the auction business; that it was further understood that on sixty days’ notice from either one of the parties to the other the contract could be terminated. The witness further testified that from that time on the parties drew what money they wanted and left the question of settlement until the final accounting was had. It also appeared that the bookkeeper who kept the books of this business, in consequence of the instructions received from the defendant after this conversation between the plaintiffs intestate and the defendant, had divided the profits of the business by crediting one-eiglith to O’Brien, one-eighth to plaintiff’s intestate, and the other six-eighths to the defendant, and that this method proceeded without further objection by either of the parties down to the death of the plaintiff’s intestate.

The first question arising' is whether this was a copartnership, in which case an action at law could not be .maintained for the amount due to either of those interested until an accounting had been had. This point was raised by the defendant when he made his motion to dismiss upon the ground that the action was a common-law action to recover for money due to the plaintiff’s intestate as an employee. Just what is sufficient to constitute a copartnership is a question about which there has been considerable confusion; but the prevailing opinion now is that any contract by which the parties to the contract are entitled to share in the profits or business as owners thereof is a copartnership, rather than an employment. Thus it is said in American and English Encyelopsedia of Law (Yol. 22 [2d ed.], p. 14): There are two essential elements “ present in every partnership. These are first, a contract between the partners; and, second, this contract must be for the sharing as common owners of the profits of a business.” On page 27 it is said that the ultimate and conclusive test of partnership is simply co-ownership" of the [468]*468profits of a business; that where. the intention of the parties to a contract is to carry on a business and share the profits between them as common pwners or joint proprietors of the business,, such parties, are partners. On page 34 it is said that nothing appearing but the rendition of services and the sharing of profits, the presumption is that the parties were partners; and on page 41 it is.said that proof merely of a sharing in the profits of- a business raises a prima facie presumption of- the -existence of a copartnership, because the most natural inference, where nothing else appears,, is. that the persons sharing the profits do so because they jointly own them; that this presumption is not conclusive, but may be overthrown by proof of other .circumstances showing that the profits, are' shared on some' other basis than as common owners; but that in the- absence of any such explanation as to the ■ basis , upon which the profits are shared, mere proof of profit sharing is sufficient to establish the fact of partnership.

In Leggett v. Hyde (58 N. Y. 272) it was held that the contribution by a party of a sum of money to a firm to be employed as capital in its business, by reason of which he was, entitled to- have and demand from it one-third of the profits of its business every half year, constituted him a ‘ partner. (Citing with approval what was said in Everett v. Coe, 5 Den.

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Related

Reynolds v. Searle
186 A.D. 202 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1919)
Jones v. Walker
51 Misc. 624 (Appellate Terms of the Supreme Court of New York, 1906)

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Bluebook (online)
112 A.D. 464, 98 N.Y.S. 321, 1906 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 707, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lefevre-v-silo-nyappdiv-1906.