McCall v. Moss

112 Ill. 493
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 27, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 112 Ill. 493 (McCall v. Moss) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCall v. Moss, 112 Ill. 493 (Ill. 1884).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Craig

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was a bill in equity, brought in May, 1868, by James H. McCall and Perry Frazer, in the circuit court of Peoria county, against William S. Moss, and Lydia Bradley Clark, administratrix of the estate of Tobiak S. Bradley, deceased, for the settlement of the partnership accounts of one of the firms of Moss, Bradley & Co., known as firm No. 2 and 3, and composed of William S. Moss, Tobias S. Bradley, James H. McCall and Perry Frazer.

The principal object of the bill, as originally framed, was to recover some $84,000, which was in the main a balance of interest claimed to be due from Moss and Bradley for moneys which they had drawn out of the firm and used in their own business. At the December term, 1870, of the Woodford circuit court, the cause proceeded to a hearing before Judge Richmond, and a decree was rendered in favor of the complainants for $82,408.11, of which Moss was decreed to pay $56,591.12, and the administratrix of the estate of Bradley, $25,816.99. The estate of Bradley made no objection to the decree, but paid the amount adjudged against it. No appeal from the decree was taken by Moss, and three years after the decree had been rendered, suit was brought upon it in California against Moss, judgment rendered, and the amount collected on execution. After the decree had thus been paid, Moss sued out a writ of error from this court, returnable to the September term, 1874, for the purpose of reversing the decree, and the decree was reversed and the cause remanded, mainly on the ground that the record showed a complicated state of accounts, and the cause had not been referred by the circuit court to a master to state an account between the parties. (See Moss v. McCall, 75 Ill. 190.) After the cause had been remanded, Moss filed a cross-bill, in which he set up the payment of the former decree, its reversal, and asked to be credited with the money collected from him, and that the several parties be required to pay him whatever sum might be found due him upon an account being taken. Additional evidence having been taken, the cause was again heard before the circuit court of Peoria county, when a decree was rendered in which certain facts were found, and the rights of the parties fixed as to certain matters, and the cause referred to the master to state an account. In this decree the court did not determine whether the members of the firm should be charged with interest on money drawn from the firm, and credited with interest on money advanced; but the court directed the master, in the decree, to report two statements, one with interest on the individual accounts of partners, and one without interest. The master made a report, as required by the decree, and on the final hearing the court refused to adopt, as a foundation for the decree, schedules “Al,” “A 2, ” “A3” and “A 4” of the report, which embraced a statement of the accounts, with interest, as shown by the firm books, but adopted as a basis for the decree schedules “B 1,” “B 2,” “B 3” and “B 4” of the report, rejecting entirely the allowance of interest claimed to be established by the evidence by complainants. Under this view Moss was found to be indebted to the complainants only in the sum of $3307.32 which had been paid by the amount recovered on the former decree, leaving a large amount in complainants’ hands to be refunded, which they were required to do by the decree.

In order to determine whether the decree of the circuit court can, under the evidence, be sustained, a brief reference to the facts in the case, and the evidence introduced in support of the facts, seems to be required.

Moss, Bradley & Co. was the name and style of four different firms, which were known as firm No. 1, No. 2 and 3, No. 4, and No. 5. Firm No. 1, which was the first, was composed of Moss, Bradley, Smith and McCall, and it was formed for the purpose of milling and distilling in the city of Peoria, under written articles of co-partnership, which bore date February 25, 1853. Under the contract, each party was to furnish one-fourth of the capital, and they were to share equally in the profits or losses of the business. A distillery was to be erected. McCall had at the time only $3500 to put in the firm, to be used in building the distillery and furnishing the fixtures, and Moss agreed that after that sum was expended he would furnish McCall what money he needed to pay his full share of the building, etc. Moss was to loan the money to McCall for two years,.at ten per cent interest. The contract also provided that “a complete set of books shall be kept, showing all business transactions of the firm, and that the same shall be kept by Tobias S. Bradley, or under his directions. ” Bradley also had the sole right of drawing all notes, drafts, or other instruments of writing whatsoever, connected with the business, and no other member of the firm had the right to bind the firm in any manner whatever without the assent of all the parties, in writing. In the summer of 1855 one of the partners (Smith) died, and Moss and Bradley bought of the heirs his.one-fourth interest in the firm, and -the business of the firm was carried on by the surviving partners in the same manner as it was before Smith’s death. Firm No. 1 continued until June 2, 1856, when Moss and Bradley sold to Perry Frazer the one-fourth interest they purchased of the heirs of Smith,-and during its existence-the firm manufactured a large quantity of whisky, and fed large numbers of hogs and ■ cattle, ‘ and made large profits in its business. After Perry Frazer purchased one-fourth interest in the firm, it was still .known by the name and style of Moss; Bradley & Co;, but the firm was designated as firm No. 2 and 3, and composed of Moss, Bradley, McCall and Frazer, each owning one-fourth of the capital. The business was continued by this firm from June 2, 1856,.until May.26, 1862, when McCall sold his interest therein to John H. Francis and Charles Raymond, and from that date the- business was carried on in the name of Moss, Bradley. & Co., but the firm was designated as firm No. 4, composed of Moss, Bradley, Frazer, Francis and Raymond. This firm continued until August 2, 1862, when Moss sold out tó Edward N. Jack. ■ From this date-the business'Was carried .on. in the same name,—Moss, Bradley & Co.,—but the firm was- composed of Bradley, Frazer, Francis, Baymond and Jack, and it was known as firm No. 5. The business was carried on by firm No. 5 from August 2, 1862, until August 1, 1865, when it stopped business, and was dissolved about January 1, 1866, when it was succeeded by a new firm, known as Bradley, Jack & Co., which has no connection with the matters involved, and it will not be necessary to give any attention to that firm.

The manner in which the business of the firms Nos. 1 to 5 was conducted, is peculiar. In every instance, when one firm stopped business and the new one succeeding it commenced, the firm that stopped did not settle up, and divide its capital and assets among its members, but all the capital and assets were, by agreement of all parties in interest, turned over to the succeeding firm, and the new firm assumed the liabilities of the old firm, took its assets, and agreed to repay all that remained after the payment of all liabilities. From firm No. 1 to firm No. 5, inclusive, this is the manner in which the business was transacted, and while the bill was filed to settle the affairs of but one firm, (No.

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Bluebook (online)
112 Ill. 493, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccall-v-moss-ill-1884.