Maxfield v. Seabury

77 N.W. 555, 75 Minn. 93, 1898 Minn. LEXIS 996
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedDecember 21, 1898
DocketNos. 11,411—(163)
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 77 N.W. 555 (Maxfield v. Seabury) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maxfield v. Seabury, 77 N.W. 555, 75 Minn. 93, 1898 Minn. LEXIS 996 (Mich. 1898).

Opinions

COLLINS, J.

There is very little dispute over the facts in this case, and all need not be stated in this opinion.

1. It was found by the court that, according to the books of account kept by the old firm of Maxfield & Seabury, the interest of Louis H. Maxfield in the firm and in its business was of the value of $47,478.41, and that this was the amount which Seabury then and there agreed to pay Maxfield for his interest, the latter to withdraw from the firm. The agreement was consummated. Maxfield was paid $5,000 in cash December 5, 1890, and the balance of the amount agreed upon was evidenced by Seabury’s notes, in different sums, all payable to Maxfield’s order within one year, without interest. The transaction then stood completed as between Maxfield and defendant.

[95]*95The new firm, composed of Seabury and W. T. Maxfield, under the firm name of Seabury & Co., was formed at once, and was continued during the years hereinafter mentioned. Seabury’s notes were then indorsed and transferred by Maxfield to his wife, the plaintiff, but this was wholly without consideration. She was not an innocent purchaser for value.

2. The contract, made a part of the complaint, between the plaintiff and the defendant, was dated February 21,1891, but was to take effect as of January 1, 1891, for two years. At the end of 1892 it was renewed for two years, and at the end of the year 1894 it was again renewed for one year. It recited that Seabury had received $40,000 of the plaintiff’s money, by him to be invested in his own name in the firm business, and to be handled and finally accounted for as specified in said contract. It was provided in the second section that: »

“At the end of each calendar year during continuance of this contract an account is to be taken of all the liabilities of said firm, and of all its property at the then current cash value thereof; and at the same time the net profit or net loss, if any, which shall have accrued from the business done by said firm during the next preceding twelve months shall be computed, estimated and agreed upon; and thereupon a balance sheet shall be made out and delivered to said Adelaide C. Maxfield, and, unless the same be objected to by her within ten days thereafter, the same shall thereupon be conclusively deemed to be correct to all intents and purposes.”

The next section provided that, in case of an actual net loss in the business during the year for which a balance sheet had been rendered, one-tenth of such net loss should operate as a payment by Seabury, to that extent, upon the $40,000, the residue only to be accounted for to plaintiff. If a net profit had accrued, it was to be divided pro rata according to the amount of capital invested, up to 8 per cent, thereon. If the profit exceeded this per cent, plaintiff was to receive a further sum equal to one-tenth of the excess. The fourth, sixth and eighth sections were as follows:

“(4) At the end of the year 1892, unless this agreement shall then be renewed for some further period, said Seabury shall account for and pay over to said Adelaide C. Maxfield all that portion of said sum of forty thousand dollars ($40,000) received by him from her, [96]*96as above stated, which portion then remains invested in said business; and the amount then coming to said Adelaide C. Maxfield hereunder shall be by said Seabury paid to her in monthly instalments of five thousand dollars ($5,000) per month, until the same is fully paid.”
“(6) Said Adelaide C. Maxfield is not to be a partner in said firm or business, nor is she to have any of the rights, powers or privileges of a partner therein; and during continuance of this contract said Seabury shall be under no personal obligation with respect to the sum of forty thousand dollars ($40,000) as herein mentioned, further or otherwise than as herein mentioned, but he shall and will keep said moneys invested as aforesaid, and handle such moneys with the same care and attention as he does with respect to his own capital invested in said business.”
“(8) This agreement is made to take effect and be in force as of, from and after January 1,1891, and the said sum of forty thousand dollars ($40,000) first herein mentioned is to be deemed invested in said business as of, from and after that date.”

3. At the end of each year up to and including 1894, defendant-made out and furnished the balance sheets mentioned in section 2, and no objection was made to either by plaintiff, although the yearly net profit seems to have been much less than 8 per cent.

In 1895 it was discovered by the firm that their cashier, Smith, had been stealing from his employers from the year 1888, his peculations, when discovered, amounting in the aggregate to over $11,-000, of which amount he returned $7,000. When making the final balance sheet to plaintiff for the year ending December 31, 1895, defendant sought to'surcharge her account with $1,070.54 as her share of the amount stolen, to which she objected, and this lawsuit resulted, in which plaintiff is attempting to recover said sum, defendant having accounted for the remainder of her investment.

4. Smith’s appropriation of money commenced more than one year prior to the dissolution of the old firm, in 1890, and continued down to the day it was detected, in 1895. The amount taken in any particular year could not be ascertained from the evidence, according to the findings, and as a conclusion of law the court below held that this was not material, for the purposes of this action, so long as the aggregate amount taken from both firms was determined. The effect of this conclusion was that, as against plaintiff’s [97]*97claim under the contract, there could be offset that part of the amount taken from the old firm by Smith.

5. It appears that the sale made by Maxfield to Seabury in December, 1890, and the withdrawal of the former from the firm of Maxfield & Seabury, was brought about by a course of outside speculation indulged in by L. H. Maxfield, which was regarded as inimical to the business, and consequently to the interests of Mr. Seabury and Mr. W. T. Maxfield, his partners; and that Seabury offered, and Maxfield accepted, as the consideration, the amount which, from the books of the concern, appeared to be the value of Maxfield’s interest in the firm and its business, January 1, 1890, all parties believing that the books had been honestly and fairly kept, and that Mr. Maxfield’s actual interest was properly shown therein. It was, in fact, a lump sale, no effort being made to ascertain his real interest. It was made in good faith upon the part of all concerned, and, notwithstanding the thefts which had theretofore been committed by Smith, Maxfield’s interest might have been of much greater value than the amount paid, or it might have been of much less value. There was no attempt to mislead, no false representation, and no warranty as to the real value of Maxfield’s interest. Both parties acted upon their belief as to the firm books in igno1 ranee of Smith’s thefts, wholly excluding any consideration of profits or losses of the 1890 business.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
77 N.W. 555, 75 Minn. 93, 1898 Minn. LEXIS 996, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maxfield-v-seabury-minn-1898.