Malley v. Atlantic Fire & Marine Insurance

51 Conn. 222, 1883 Conn. LEXIS 59
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJuly 27, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 51 Conn. 222 (Malley v. Atlantic Fire & Marine Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Malley v. Atlantic Fire & Marine Insurance, 51 Conn. 222, 1883 Conn. LEXIS 59 (Colo. 1883).

Opinions

Pardee, J.

This is an action upon a policy of insurance against loss by fire. On the 12th day of May, 1881, the defendant executed and delivered to the plaintiff a policy of insurance against loss by fire, upon his stock of merchandise, for the sum of $2,500, to continue in force one year from that date. It provided that “if the interest of the assured in the property be any other than the entire, unconditional, sole ownership of the property, for the use and benefit of the assured, * * it must be so represented to the company and so expressed in the written part of this policy; otherwise the policy shall be void.” Also, “if the property be sold or transferred * * or any change take place in title or possession, * * whether by legal process or judicial decree, or voluntary transfer or conveyance, * * then, and in every such ease, this policy shall be void.”

On January 12th, 1882, the plaintiff completed an inventory. Annexed to it were three statements, under the following heads: — “ Edward Malley, general,” “ Edward Malley, personal,” and “ Edward Malley & Co.” On that day he and William Neely signed the following contract:

“ We, the undersigned, Edward Malley, of New Haven, and William Neely, of New York, do hereby enter into the [245]*245following partnership agreement, which shall remain in force three years from the date hereof, January 12th, 1882 :
“We hereby agree to become partners in the business now established and being conducted by said Edward Mallejr in New Haven.
“ The said Malley hereby agrees to furnish the capital necessary to run the business in its present shape, except as hereinafter elected. Also to furnish the store or stores now occupied by him in the business. The said Neely shall devote his whole time and attention to the business, and not engage in any other business during the continuance of these articles, and will not, during the same length of time, give or indorse any notes, or otherwise become surety for any person or persons whatever, without the consent of said Malley, either in his own private matters or in behalf of the firm. He also agrees to furnish, within the first year, $10,000 capital for the use of the firm.
• “ The said Neely shall be entitled, out of the net profits of the business, to receive twelve and a half per cent, thereof; and if the net profits exceed $50,000, shall receive fifteen per cent, thereof; in any event said Neely shall receive $3,000 per year. In estimating the net profits there shall be deducted, as a portion of the expenses, six per cent, on the actual value of the stock and fixtures; also the rent of the old store at $8,000, and the shoe store, if used, at $2,000; said store and fixtures to be kept in repair bjr said Malley himself.
“ Said Neely shall not, however, draw out of said concern more than the sum of $2,000 in any one year, until the fund in the concern shall accumulate to the sum of $10,000 over and above that sum put into the concern by said Neely as capital. All the remainder of the profits of the said concern shall belong to said Malley.”

On the same day the plaintiff made the following memorandum upon his journal: “ Accounts closed on Sales Ledger K and re-opened on Ledger A of E. Malley & Co.” Since the date of the contract the business has been advertised and conducted in the name of Edward Malley & Co., [246]*246except that the bank account kept at the Merchants’ National Bank of New Haven, remained in the name of Edward Malley, and he signed the notes and checks.

Between January 12th and February 28th, 1882, the firm added by purchase to its stock, merchandise of the value of nearly $77,000, and sold therefrom merchandise of the value of nearly $59,000. On February 28th, 1882, the stock was nearly destroyed by fire.

William Neely has not contributed to the capital the $10,000 specified in the contract, nor is there any evidence that he had received therefrom any larger sum than at the rate of $2,000 per year.

The defendant refusing to pay any portion of the loss, this suit was instituted, and the case is reserved for the advice of this court as to the judgment to be rendered therein.

The plaintiff and William Neely signed a contract which in terms declared that they thereby entered into a partnership agreement which should remain in force three years from its date, and that they thereby agreed to become partners in the business established and theretofore conducted by the plaintiff in New Haven. They jointly determine that the plaintiff shall contribute the property and Neely the labor and skill constituting the capital of the partnership. They agree upon the method of management of the “business,” and upon the rule of division of the “profits of the concern” as profits. The agreement is not for a single adventure, but for the creation of the ordinary mercantile partnership. The books of account of the plaintiff as a sole trader are closed; others are opened, merchandise is bought and sold, the business is advertised and- conducted in the name of the partnership. The contract creates a partnership in the fullest legal sense of that term, with all resulting rights to and duties upon each individual entering therein. With the exception of the agreement of Neely not to give or endorse notes in the name of the firm, there is nothing either in the contract or in the acts of the parties after its execution, which restrains or even manifests an [247]*247intent to restrain from its utmost reach, the opening agreement to “ become partners in the business.” Therefore upon the execution thereof the title to the property contributed to the capital of the partnership by the plaintiff instantly vested in himself and Neely jointly. They became joint owners or joint tenants thereof and of all additions thereto, and joint debtors therefor in proportion to their several interests. Each had an interest in every parcel and in the whole; in each was the right to joint possession and care, and the right of disposition for the uses of the firm ; and the name of each became necessary to' any suit for the recovery of the price.

A contract which creates a partnership in the most complete sense of that term, which invests each partner with a partnership title to the property contributed to the capital, which gives him the right to receive profits, and compels him to bear losses, in cases where each contributes an equal portion of that property, will have the same force and effect in cases where one contributes the property and the other only skill and labor; inequality in this respect does not control the interpretation of the contract; the ownership is the same in character, differing possibly in degree by agreement. In Story on Partnership, sec. 27, it is said in effect, of eases in which one partner only contributes property to the capital of a partnership, and there is no positive agreement that it shall remain his exclusive property, and no implication from the circumstances of the particular ease leading to a different conclusion, that there will be presumed to be a community of interest in the property as well as in the profit and loss. In Whitcomb v. Converse, 119 Mass., 38, four persons signed articles of partnership, two contributing property and two time and skill only to the capital, profits to be divided equally after paying interest upon the property; the partnership was dissolved by consent, and one of those contributing property closed the business, which ended in a loss.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
51 Conn. 222, 1883 Conn. LEXIS 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/malley-v-atlantic-fire-marine-insurance-conn-1883.