Lingenfelter v. St. Clair

179 Iowa 11
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 20, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 179 Iowa 11 (Lingenfelter v. St. Clair) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lingenfelter v. St. Clair, 179 Iowa 11 (iowa 1917).

Opinion

Preston, J.

1. The petition alleges that the partnership was formed in December, 1913, and that the agreement was in parol; that the business was to be conducted under the name of St. Clair & Lingenfelter, each to share profits and losses equally; that each should furnish the funds equally, and that plaintiff should handle all checks, plaintiff borrowing all the money needed, upon his individual credit; that the parties entered into such business in Des Moines, Iowa, and continued to carry it on until August 1, 1914.

The answer denies that the parties entered into a contract of partnership as alleged; defendant denies that he . agreed to share losses but avers that the actual contract was that plaintiff was to carry on the business and defendant was to work for him, defendant receiving one half the profits as compensation. Defendant also' counterclaimed for $198.22 for money or goods advanced by him to plaintiff, less a payment thereon.

The reply admits that defendant furnished the goods and money alleged in the counterclaim, but says that, by reason of the alleged partnership, there was no merit in the [13]*13counterclaim; and the court took this matter' into- consideration in the accounting. ■ ■ ■

Numerous authorities are cited upon either side upon questions as to the admissibility of evidence- and in regard to circumstantial evidence, partnership; rules for weighing evidence, -and -the like; but the question- presented is almost entirely ohe-of fact. - We do not understand appellant to seriously question the amount found by the court to be due from defendant if - the partnership was' established,' except as to one transaction- with one Browh in regard to thé shipment of some mules, which-will be-referred to later in the opinion. ■ ■

The principal contest in the district court was, and is in this court, as to whether there was a contract of partnership,. or whether defendant was acting for plaintiif as an employee.

The record is somewhat voluminous, the arguments taking up nearly 200 pages. To set out all the evidence and all the circumstances in-an opinion would take up a considerable part of a volume of the reports. Such a ease is of little-value as a precedent, and, as we have often said, it is -not’ our habit to attempt -to set out the evidence in detail.'

i partnership • ev?areno©:°suf-flciency. The case is triable in this court de novo. -Very- often - the determination of such a case -turns upon the credibility of the- witnesses, and, as we have often said; the- trial court, hav- ‘ seen an^- kea^d the witnesses, is in a bétter position 'to :wéigh the testimony than we can arL(j |or reason some weight is given to the decision of the trial court. It is- true, as appellant contends, that, where the Supreme Court is of-the opinion that the lower court has made a -mistake, 'it will reversé the- ease,' and that otherwise an appeal in such a case would be useless. On the other hand, it is contended by appellee ’ that a case will not be -reversed unless the record makes it clear that a wrong conclusion has been reached, citing Whitley v. Johnson, 135 Iowa 620, at 624.

[14]*14o a scope of‘^causes triable de novo. We have heard it stated that in some eases trial judges in an equitable action feel that, as the case is triable de novo in the Supreme Court, it is unnecessary that they should as carefully consider the case as they would if if were not triable de novo. We think this -g not ^ ru¡e_ of course, a trial judge passing upon a case in that way does not perform his full duty. But where it appears from the record that the trial judge has patiently and carefully tried the case and conscientiously considered and weighed the testimony of all the witnesses and all the circumstances, we ought, because of the superior and more advantageous position of the trial judge, to give weight to his conclusion. In the view of the writer, perhaps we should give more weight than we ordinarily do to the conclusion of the trial court. In a law action, 'such finding is conclusive upon conflicting evidence; but under the law, the rule is different in equity cases, and we are required to weigh the evidence as best we may.

It is thought by appellant that the only direct testimony in the case as to what the contract was is that of the plaintiff and the defendant, and that there are 50 to 75 other matters which appellant says constitute circumstantial evidence, and that some of the circumstances are such that one party claims they are inconsistent with plaintiff’s assertion that there was a partnership, but consistent with defendant’s claim that the relation was a hiring. Other circumstances are claimed by plaintiff to be inconsistent with defendant’s version of their contract; but appellant contends that they are satisfactorily explained, or are insufficient to sustain the burden of proof on the part of plaintiff, and that other circumstances are consistent equally with the claims of both parties, and that they are, therefore, of no assistance either way in deciding the case. Appellant contends that these circumstances tend in a greater or less degree to corroborate one side or the other.

We cannot quite agree with appellant’s claim that all [15]*15the matters outside the testimony of the parties are circumstantial. To illustrate: a number of plaintiff’s witnesses testified as to admissions by defendant that he and plaintiff were partners, and' that each was to share the profits and losses equally. It may be true that such verbal admissions are not evidence of the strongest character, and yet we think such evidence is direct evidence.

We shall attempt to set out the substance of the testimony, but as briefly as may be, without attempting to notice all the circumstances which tend to strengthen or weaken the testimony of the witnesses, or the contradictions thereof, either in the evidence of the witness himself or by some other witnesses. There was some little negotiation between the parties before the consummation of the contract, whatever it was. The parties had been acquainted for about 15 years; they had been in business for about three months, two or-three years before the arrangement referred to in this case, under an agreement by which plaintiff bought horses, and defendant, who- had a livery barn, fed them and kept them in the bam until sold, and received half what the horses brought, over their fair cost for feeding and sheltering them. As we understand it, it is not contended that the first arrangement was a partnership. Plaintiff had been in the horse business for 30 years, and claims to have been proficient in the business. There is some evidence tending to show that defendant was not a practical horseman, but there is other evidence that, though he had been in the livery business all his life and his experience was chiefly in that line, still he was a good horseman and a good judge of a horse and its value.

Omitting other circumstances shown in the record as to the preliminary negotiations, we shall proceed to refer to the substance of the testimony. As to the testimony of plaintiff as a witness, it is thought by appellant that plaintiff’s testimony is weakened because, in some instances, the witness stated that he and the defendant agreed on certain terms, [16]*16and that such is the statement of a conclusion. Some of it may be in the-nature- of a conclusion; ■ and yet it is sometimes difficult to: say just what- is and what is not a conclusion. Moyers v. Fogarty,

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Bluebook (online)
179 Iowa 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lingenfelter-v-st-clair-iowa-1917.