Lindsay v. Swift

119 N.E. 787, 230 Mass. 407, 1918 Mass. LEXIS 949
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMay 27, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 119 N.E. 787 (Lindsay v. Swift) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lindsay v. Swift, 119 N.E. 787, 230 Mass. 407, 1918 Mass. LEXIS 949 (Mass. 1918).

Opinion

Braley, J.

The master states that the original order of reference directed him “to hear the parties and their evidence, to find the facts and report the same . . . with such portions of the evidence as either party may request.” But on the record, the interlocutory decrees appointing him and giving directions as to his duties not having so provided, he was without authority to transmit at the request of the defendants the portions of the evidence annexed to the report, and it cannot be considered. If either party desired the whole or any part reported, application therefor should have been made to the court. Ginn v. Almy, 212 Mass. 486, 500.

The master has found that for some time before the association of the defendant Swift, hereafter designated as the defendant, with the firm, the plaintiff and one D. F. Munroe were dealers in paper under the firm name of D. F. Munroe and Company. The organization, herein referred to as the Munroe Company, consisted of two departments, one known as the white paper department and the other as the manila department forming comparatively the smaller part. The plaintiff upon the death of Munroe, which occurred some ten months after the defendant had become connected with him, purchased Munroe’s interest and continued the business under the name of the old firm. The white paper department thenceforth was solely under the control of the plaintiff, who, also using the firm name, acted as selling agent for two paper mills, but the manila department was conducted and controlled under an arrangement with the defendant, described in the bill as constituting him manager of the manila [410]*410department sustaining fiduciary relations to the plaintiff. While no contract in writing ever was made, the master reports that, upon being informed by the defendant who was then the secretary of a corporation dealing in part in manila paper, that he intended to engage in business for himself, the plaintiff proposed that the defendant should become connected with the firm taking charge of the manila department, which was to be enlarged and extended. The defendant having accepted, the parties in substance agreed that the manila department should be under the management of the defendant and conducted separately from the other business, although the Munroe Company was to furnish gratuitously all necessary capital as well as giving to the manila department the use of the offices, storehouse and other facilities for the transaction of business, «but whatever necessary expenses remained were to be borne by the department. The defendant agreed to “bring to said department all the business he controlled or could acquire and certain salesmen, familiar with the trade, and should devote his best efforts and his entire time to the management thereof; and that the profits of the department should be divided equally between D. F. Munroe and Company and said Swift.” The agreement also provided that certain merchandise representing the defendant’s interest in the corporation should be deposited in the Munroe Company’s warehouse, and when sold the proceeds were to be paid to him. The defendant thereupon became manager of the manila department and until their relations were severed the agreement, which was not limited in time, and after Munroe’s death “continued to be the basis of the relatioiis” between the parties although the defendant submitted to the plaintiff the draft of a contract “defining their agreements and arrangements more fully” which he declined to sign. The master also states, in paragraph two, that while under the original agreement the defendant did not receive interest on money not withdrawn from the business, it later was agreed that interest at six per cent should be allowed on whatever sums he did not choose to withdraw. It is found explicitly that the defendant confined his activities entirely to the management of the manila department which was carried on separately from the white paper department, and had no interest in and nothing to do with the other business of the Munroe Company. He solicited trade, directed the purchase and sale of [411]*411merchandise, hired the employees, attended to the correspondence, dealt with customers, collected debts, and did what he could to make the department successful. When the defendant assumed the management certain office fittings belonging to the Munroe Company were turned over to the manila department, but thereafter all furniture and equipment needed for that department were charged to it, together with all losses from bad debts or trade losses, and all depreciation therewith connected. “To some extent it even competed with” the white paper department. A separate set of books was kept although the bank or cash accounts of the two departments were not separated. The plaintiff under the original agreement was required to furnish whatever capital might be required, and this he did. He also retained possession or control of all the funds and money of the manila department, and the proceeds of sales of merchandise, which were deposited in the bank account standing in the name of the Munroe Company. If money was to be hired the notes were signed in the name of the company, and all bills, notes, debts and expenses were paid ■ by the plaintiff in cash or by checks drawn by him on the bank account of the company. The parties never held themselves out as copartners, and all the business, in so far as those who dealt with them were concerned, was transacted under the name of the Munroe Company, although occasionally the plaintiff as well as the defendant referred to the other as “his partner,” and also as “manager of the manila department of D. F. Munroe and Company” or as “manager of D. F. Munroe and Company.”

The essential elements of the paroi agreement as modified by the allowance of interest to the defendant are not ambiguous. The defendant engaged to give his entire time and devote his best efforts in the management of the manila department which as between the parties was treated as distinct from the white paper department and the plaintiff’s agency. In the accomplishment of the enterprise the master finds that the plaintiff exercised no personal supervision or control over the defendant-who was free to transact the business of the manila department in his own way as to hiring of salesmen, making of purchases and sales, the selection of customers and giving credit.

The defendant contended before the master that having been a'business arrangement for their mutual and common benefit to [412]*412which the plaintiff acting under the name of the ■ Munroe Company contributed the necessary capital and certain business facilities, while he put in his services, all the business controlled by him, or which he could acquire, and certain salesmen familiar with the trade, and whatever profits accrued were to be divided equally, enough appears to warrant a finding that as between the parties a partnership existed under McMurtrie v. Guiler, 183 Mass. 451, 453, and cases cited; Estabrook v. Woods, 192 Mass. 499; Phipps v. Little, 213 Mass. 414; Arnold v. Maxwell, 223 Mass. 47, 49, and Deutschman v. Dwyer, 223 Mass. 261, 264. The plaintiff however insists that notwithstanding the terms of the contract and the manner of performance by the parties, the defendant was merely his servant.

The master before whom these conflicting positions first were taken having reviewed their relations in the light of evidence not reported, although his essential findings, which we have previously stated, appear, concludes, that “ Whether, on the facts above stated . . .

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Bluebook (online)
119 N.E. 787, 230 Mass. 407, 1918 Mass. LEXIS 949, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lindsay-v-swift-mass-1918.