Lusk v. Graham

21 La. Ann. 159
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 15, 1869
DocketNo. 1407
StatusPublished

This text of 21 La. Ann. 159 (Lusk v. Graham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lusk v. Graham, 21 La. Ann. 159 (La. 1869).

Opinions

Howel, J.

In 1855 the plaintiff and defendants, as partners under the style of Graham & Co., had a contract with the city of New Orleans for the collection of t|ic revenues of two sections of tho wharves, for three years from the first of October of that year. On the twenty-seventh of October, 1857, the plaintiff, hy contract under private signature, afterwards made authentic, sold his interest therein to the defendants for tho sum of $8,813 94, retaining the following agreement which ho terms a “ counter letter.”

“Whereas, James A. Lusk lias this day transferred to ns his interest in the wharves and in the firm of Graham & Co., for tho sum of eight thousand eight hundred and thirteen and ninety-four one hundredth dollars, we agree, after the affairs of Graham & Co. connected with the wharves, are all liquidated, in case one third of the profits amounts to more than the above sum, to pay tho said Lusk or anybody he may assign this to, one third of the amount of profits over and above the amount specified above, reserving tbe right to deduct any amount that may be due, or for which we are responsible for J. A. Lusk, L. Y. Lusk and Lusk & Co., either to Josiah Cole or D. S. Graham.

(Signed) “JOSIAH COLE,

“D. S. GRAHAM.”

In December, 1858, J. A. Lusk brought this suit for a liquidation and settlement of the partnership and to recover his share of the profits, upon the theory that the above instrument continued tho partnership as it was before the transfer. After the proceedings in the lower court had advanced to a certain stiige, the plaintiff took an appeal from the rulings of the judge a quo to this court, when the opinion was expressed, that the parties had acquiesced in the ruling of the lower court, to the effect that the plaintiff had no right, as a partner by virtue of the counter letter, to demand a liquidation and settlement of the partnership affairs, hut that as a creditor of the firm he had the right to demand the. rendition of an account, for the purpose of ascertaining, the surplus of one third of the net profits, if any, to which lie [160]*160might be entitled under the agreement, in addition to the fixed price of $8,813 94; and that tho account thus to be rendered should embrace the business of the partnership from the date of the partnership contract and not from the date, of the counter letter, as contended by the defendants; and it was decreed that the auditors to whom the accounts between the parties had been referred, “pass upon and state the accounts between the plaintiff and defendants, from the date of tho contract of partnership,” and the cause was remanded for further proceedings.

This aj>peal is taken by plaintiff from a judgment homologating tho report of tho umpire upon said reference, tlie two auditors representing the parties not agreeing.

This report professes to be in conformity to the order of the Supremo Court and proceeds upon the basis that the accounts between tho parties were adjusted at the date of sale and counter letter, and as the books of the concern had been destroyed by fire prior to said date, tho examination was confined to the accounts subsequent thereto, taking the price then agreed on ($8,813 94) as the measure of plaintiff’s interest in the profits to-said date, and which sum is stated as the amount then duo by plaintiff to defendants, to be deducted from tho profits subsequently accruing to plaintiff.

To this report, which finds a balance due by plaintiff, he-filed objections, which he calls exceptions, asserting its nullity as to forms of proceeding, and denying its correctness in substance.

As we are called on to dispose of tho case on the record before us, we deem it unnecessary to express an opinion upon the question of form, and will use the report so far as supported by evidence and admissions, as an aid in coming to our conclusion.

According to the counter letter, the plaintiff sold his one-third interest in the wharves to the firm of Graham & Co. for $8,813 94, with the understanding that if, upon a final settlement of the affairs of said firm connected with the lease of the wharves, one-third of the net profits should exceed said sum, such excess should be paid to him as a further consideration or price, deducting therefrom any indebtedness of J. A. Lusk, the plaintiff, L. Y. Lusk and Lusk & Co. to the vendees, Colo & Graham. The sum of $8,813 94 was fixed and paid, with a contingency that it might bo increased, if the wharf contract with the city should turn out so far successful as to make one-third of the net profits upon the whole contract exceed that sum. If it should prove unsuccessful or unprofitable in its total result, plaintiff would still have realized that sum by his connection with it.

We think the process of ascertaining the profits, in principle, a simple and easy one, the assets, composed of the property, credits and receipts to be ascertained, and from the aggregate deduct the debts and expenditures. If one-third of the balance exceeds $8,813 94, this sum [161]*161must by the terms of the counter letter be deducted, and the remainder paid to plaintiff.

This course, however, has not been pursued by any of-the auditors, who have all investigated only the accounts subsequent to the twenty-seventh of October, 1857, except two items (cash on hand at that date, and sundry bills then existing but afterwards paid by the vendees, Graham & Cole), which make no material change in the result.

After a careful examination of all the facts and figures, we have concluded, as the only course authorized by the record, to adopt the hypothesis, that at the date of the transfer by plaintiff to defendants, the former had received from the concern $8,813 94 (the price stipulated) more than his share of the actual cash profits realized, without reference to the stock of materials, etc., then on hand, and that'at the end of the lease the excess of one third of the net profits over said sum is due to him. The fact as shown, that this sum is the exact amount he then owed the partnership, and the small amount of cash on hand at the time sustain this view, which will enable us to effect an equitable adjustment of the rights of the parties, without the expense and delay of another reference to auditors, and without a specific'and detailed account of all the business prior to said transfer, which would be more satisfactory and in accordance with the former decree of .this court.

We have availed ourselves of the calculation made by plaintiff’s counsel in “statement No. 1,” making such corrections as we think the record supports.

The first correction is in the.item of cash received from “wharfage dues,” which plaintiff takes from the bank book of deposits, and the defendants from the “collection books.” It is shown that the rovenues of the wharves wTere the only source of income of the partnership business, and that, as collected, they were regularly entered in the “collection books,” and we therefore consider these books rather than the bank book, as the correct evidence of said receipts. These various books are not before us, but we may presume that items of cash in the account of defendants with the bank, such as price of a steamboat, dividends on stocks, sums checked out and returned, etc., may constitute some of the dejmsits and account for the alleged discrepancy in the several books. We do not consider plaintiff in the situation to avail himself of any presumptions against defendants as to tliis matter.

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21 La. Ann. 159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lusk-v-graham-la-1869.