McElroy v. Swope

47 F. 380, 1891 U.S. App. LEXIS 1443
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Missouri
DecidedSeptember 7, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 47 F. 380 (McElroy v. Swope) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McElroy v. Swope, 47 F. 380, 1891 U.S. App. LEXIS 1443 (circtwdmo 1891).

Opinion

Phillips, J.

This is a bill in equity, asserting a partnership between tho parties in certain real estate, praying for a dissolution of the partnership, and for an accounting. The answer puts in issue the existence of the alleged partnership, particularly as to the lands constituting the principal matter of contention. As to these the defendant pleads the statute of frauds in bar of the alleged partnership agreement. The case was referred to George Fearons, Esq., special master in chancery, who has made report, finding the issue of partnership for the complainant, Rnd rendering an accounting. To this report respondent has presented 95 exceptions, occupying 338 pages of type-writing, supplemented with a printed brief covering 114 pages. As the scope of those exceptions invited the court to a minute and careful perusal of about 900 pages of written evidence and about 85 exhibits, to say nothing of a very lengthy report by the master, it is unnecessary to suggest that the court’s summer vacation has been most pleasantly occupied with this literary diversion. That the court should be expected, in justice to other public duties and a proper regard to human endurance, to pass in detail upon these exceptions, is quite unreasonable. That the master’s report is not full in some material matters, and unnecessarily full in others, is not to be denied. It is also to be conceded that there are some inaccuracies of statement and errors of fact in it; but unless it can he made to appear that these defects have wrought some material prejudice to one of the parties, such as a conclusion drawn from misstated facts, or a conclusion of law predicated thereon, or there be some important fact not found which should have been reported, whereby a different result should be reached, it is not perceivable Why there should be a re-referenco or vacation of the report.

In view of the hitter assault made upon the conduct of the master, and the severe arraignment of his findings, the court has taken upon itself the no little task of carefully reading the mass of evidence, with the determination to satisfy itself of the facts. The master finds that in the month of February, 1888, the parties entered into an arrangement, having for its object the purchasing and selling of lands for a profit; and [382]*382that the business was conducted at Kansas City, Mo., throughout the year 1888, and extended into the year 1889; during which time they acquired many titles, made some sales, and earned large profits; and that in the property so acquired known as the “Campbell Lands” (the title to which was placed in the respondent) the respondent refuses to recognize the rights and interest of the complainant. It is found that the terms of this copartnership were, substantially, that Swope was to furnish the necessary money, on his consent, to effect the purchases and conduct the business; that complainant, McElroy, was to give the business his personal attention and services; that when a purchase was made on the monejr furnished by Swope, McElroy was to pay him current rate of interest, or 8 per cent., on the one-half thereof for an agreed period, giving to Swope a lien on his undivided half interest in the land as security.

We will review the evidence only so far as to discover whether or not the conclusion of the master is sustained by the weight of evidence. The complainant is a man 32 years of age. He possesses rare business qualifications, especially for the enterprise in question. He is shrewd, energetic, and pushing, and possessed an aptitude for such an adventure. This the respondent bore testimony to, as on one or more occasions during their operations he stated that if he had had the services of complainant earlier they could have made many hundred thousand dollars. The respondent is 63 years of age and unmarried. He is a citizen of Kentucky, but has practically made his home in Kansas City for 30 years, where he has accumulated a large fortune. .He is a gentleman of liberal education, wide business experience and sagacity, and somewhat learned in the elementary principles of the law. The ready cash of the one, and his ambition for an ever-increasing fortune, and the necessities and business traits of the other, only needed an introduction to bring them together in a business adventure. In the early part' of 1888 they bought a lot of ground in Kansas City known as the “Walnut-Street-Property.” Of this it is sufficient to say that it was bought and sold on •speculation, and the profit was divided between them About the month of February, 1888, they got together, and formed a business arrangement, which I confess it were difficult to characterize in legal phrase if it were not a copartnership. The complainant’s version of the preliminary negotiations is substantially as follows: During a conversation at Swope’s private room, perhaps in January, or the forepart of February, 1888, Swope suggested that he believed a live firm could make a great deal of money by looking up neglected properties in and about the city; that in every large city there were more of less old bachelors, who lived alone, their relatives living elsewhere, and when they died their relatives did not learn of it for many years thereafter; in other instances parties who lived in Kansas City in early days had practically deserted their property about 1872-73, and they were sold for taxes, the parties not regarding them, in the depressed condition of real estate, as worth the taxes; that by looking up such parties or their heirs their interest might be purchased for an inconsiderable sum, — and proposed that complain[383]*383ant go into partnership with him. At that Lime complainant was engaged with his brother, under the firm name of McElroy & Co., in real-estate business at Kansas City, and he suggested to respondent that the proposed partnership with him might materially interfere with his said business. To meet this objection Swope suggested that he owned a large amount of real estate in the city, which ho rented, requiring the services of an agent, and that he would turn this business over to the firm of McElroy Co., which rental roll amounted to about $3,500 per month; in addition to which he said he would furnish all the money to carry on the partnership, paying the expenses of abstractors, as an offset against complainant’s time and services in looking up the properties, keeping the accounts with the abstractors, and having his (complainant’s) typewriter copy chains of title, and the complainant to examine them. The complainant was to pay respondent 8 per cent, interest on one-half of the money furnished by respondent for a half interest in the property acquired by them.

Robert L. McElroy, a brother of complainant, testified that about the time named by complainant he was present at the private office of complainant, when the matter of the formation of the partnership between complainant and respondent was being discussed. His version of the conversation is as follows:

“Mr. James IS. McElroy told me on entering the room that he had been talking with Swope on this matter of forming a partnership for the purpose of buying and selling land, about which he had before spoken to me. My brother then Haiti to me that he did not know what the effect of the formar tion of sncli a partnership would have on the business of James E. McElroy & Co., when Mr. Swope spoke up and said that the linn of McElroy & Co.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Wertzberger v. McJunkin
1935 OK 448 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1935)
Hoge v. George
200 P. 96 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1921)
Thompson v. McKee
1914 OK 338 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1914)
Lind v. Webber
36 Nev. 623 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1913)
Bond v. Taylor
69 S.E. 1000 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1910)
Botsford v. Van Riper
33 Nev. 156 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1910)
Jiménez v. Díaz Caneja
14 P.R. 9 (Supreme Court of Puerto Rico, 1908)
Norton v. Brink
106 N.W. 668 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1906)
Green v. Indian Gold Min. Co.
120 F. 715 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Montana, 1903)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
47 F. 380, 1891 U.S. App. LEXIS 1443, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcelroy-v-swope-circtwdmo-1891.